Apple Watch ECG feature not arriving in Canada anytime soon

Posted:
in Apple Watch edited December 2018
Are you in Canada and looking for the ECG feature of the Apple Watch? You may be in for a long wait.

Apple Watch Series 4's ECG app
Apple Watch Series 4's ECG app


In response to a query on Twitter asking if the approval process has commenced to allow the ECG function to work, government agency Health Canada advised it "has not received an application for the Apple Watch Series 4" at all.

The regulator's response also appears to lay the blame at the lack of progress at Apple's door, noting "The decision to submit a medical device license application rests with the manufacturer."

Hi Gary. To date, Health Canada has not received an application for the Apple Watch Series 4 with the EKG feature. The decision to submit a medical device licence application rests with the manufacturer.

-- GovCanHealth (@GovCanHealth)


ECG monitoring is typically only performed by hardware provided to medical professionals and healthcare providers, and are typically prevented from being provided to the general public. For it to be available to use by consumers, the Apple Watch has to receive regulatory approval for the Apple Watch Series 4 on a country-by-country basis.

The feature is available in the United States after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration cleared it for sale, making the smartwatch the first consumer device to do so without requiring medical review. While not available at launch, the ECG app was enabled for users in the U.S. as part of the watchOS 5.1.2 update on Thursday.



Apple has already advised it intends to bring the function to other Apple Watch Series 4 users, but doing so involves passing regulatory muster in each market, a process that can take a considerable amount of time.

Shortly after its availability, the ECG function has already proved itself to be a life-saver, with cardiologists noticing an uptick in patients directly as a result of its availability.
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Comments

  • Reply 1 of 34
    I don’t understand why Apple is so slow with international rollouts of new functions. :/
    toysandmeelijahgentropysmagman1979
  • Reply 2 of 34
    saareksaarek Posts: 1,523member
    I don’t understand why Apple is so slow with international rollouts of new functions. :/
    Apple has always treated their non US customers as second class citizens. That’s not going to change.

    It’s frustrating as we often pay more for the same product to boot, but as long as we continue to buy their products anyway they have no real incentive to care.
    elijahgScot1viclauyycthtcoolfactormuthuk_vanalingam
  • Reply 3 of 34
    The odd thing is I read several articles a few months ago saying Apple has been working with Health Canada to get this approved. Maybe that is still the case but Apple just hasn't formally submitted their application for approval yet. 
    elijahgScot1Deelronwatto_cobra
  • Reply 4 of 34
    I don’t understand why Apple is so slow with international rollouts of new functions. :/
    Typically the problem is not Apple, it’s that each country has its own rules and bureaucracies to wade through. Who knows what’s really happening here. I know that I don’t often trust government workers to have a solid handle on what’s going on.
    edited December 2018 boxcatcherjbdragonmagman1979razorpitDeelronRayz2016williamlondonwatto_cobra
  • Reply 5 of 34
    saarek said:
    I don’t understand why Apple is so slow with international rollouts of new functions. :/
    Apple has always treated their non US customers as second class citizens. That’s not going to change.

    It’s frustrating as we often pay more for the same product to boot, but as long as we continue to buy their products anyway they have no real incentive to care.
    Most often you can blame your country’s government for not giving regulatory approvals. Or in the case of Apple Pay, banks for not signing up as they attempt to negotiate down fees.
    edited December 2018 elijahgmike1boxcatcherjbdragonmagman1979razorpitwilliamlondonwatto_cobra
  • Reply 6 of 34
    bitmodbitmod Posts: 267member
    “The feature is available in the United States after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration cleared it for sale, making the smartwatch the first consumer device to do so without requiring medical review.”

     Alivecore has the Kardia ECG that works very well and was approved by medical review. I imagine if one was truly concerned about their heart they would go with this device that is far more accurate, vastly less expensive, integrated with real-time medical review by doctors, or transmitted to you own. Even comes with a clip to fit to your smartphone. https://www.alivecor.com
    They also support the iwatch.

     The watch probably isn’t accurate enough to pass medical review - thus the legal tie-up in other countries, not so much for the feature, but the ‘marketing’ aspect of it being a medical device. Neither are as good as an 8 point lead at a hospital - but can indicate something isn’t right with rhythm.
    edited December 2018 williamlondon
  • Reply 7 of 34
    SoliSoli Posts: 10,035member
    bitmod said:
    “The feature is available in the United States after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration cleared it for sale, making the smartwatch the first consumer device to do so without requiring medical review.”

     Alivecore has the Kardia ECG that works very well and was approved by medical review. I imagine if one was truly concerned about their heart they would go with this device that is far more accurate, vastly less expensive, integrated with real-time medical review by doctors, or transmitted to you own. Even comes with a clip to fit to your smartphone. https://www.alivecor.com
    They also support the iwatch.

     The watch probably isn’t accurate enough to pass medical review - thus the legal tie-up in other countries, not so much for the feature, but the ‘marketing’ aspect of it being a medical device. Neither are as good as an 8 point lead at a hospital - but can indicate something isn’t right with rhythm.
    "without requiring medical review"? What the what what?!

    Class I and II get FDA clearance. Class III gets approval. Both clearance and approval are synonyms in English, but in reference to the FDA and their device classes they have very specific meanings. They are all reviewed for their medical claims. There is no perfunctory rubber-stamp because Apple paid someone off.

    AliveCor's KardiaBand looks to be a Class II device, too.

    edited December 2018 jbdragonJWSCmagman1979StrangeDaysRayz2016brucemc
  • Reply 8 of 34
    SoliSoli Posts: 10,035member
    saarek said:
    I don’t understand why Apple is so slow with international rollouts of new functions. :/
    Apple has always treated their non US customers as second class citizens. That’s not going to change.
    How does it benefit Apple to have gov't clearance for the ECG, banks lined up for Apple Pay, or any other features that are fully operational and ready to go and then not offer them to a country where the masses are ready to buy and they have supply on the ready to ship? I can't think of a single, logical business tactic that would make Apple not want to make as much money as possible from Canada.
    mike1jbdragonrazorpitStrangeDaysbrucemc
  • Reply 9 of 34
    bitmod said:
    “...integrated with real-time medical review by doctors...”
    Uhh, where do you come by this?  And even if it is, I presume it’s part of the $100 annual subscription.  Which is the only valuable piece of that subscript based on the features listed in their site. 
    StrangeDays
  • Reply 10 of 34
    anomeanome Posts: 1,533member
    I don’t understand why Apple is so slow with international rollouts of new functions. :/
    Typically the problem is not Apple, it’s that each country has its own rules and bureaucracies to wade through. Who knows what’s really happening here. I know that I don’t often trust government workers to have a solid handle on what’s going on.

    Apple also has to actually submit the devices for regulatory approval to each of the countries' appropriate boards. So, if Apple were concentrating on the FDA, they might not have applied to the Therepeutic Goods Administration (for example) until later. Getting FDA approval helps with getting it approved in other markets, but it isn't automatic, and nor should it be, just as getting something approved here wouldn't be an automatic pass to the FDA. Otherwise everyone would be submitting their products to the one place where it was seen as easier to get things approved for whatever reason.

    Haven't heard if it's approved here, should probably check. Hopefully it will be by the time I upgrade my AppleWatch.

    MplsPwatto_cobra
  • Reply 11 of 34
    saareksaarek Posts: 1,523member
    Soli said:
    saarek said:
    I don’t understand why Apple is so slow with international rollouts of new functions. :/
    Apple has always treated their non US customers as second class citizens. That’s not going to change.
    How does it benefit Apple to have gov't clearance for the ECG, banks lined up for Apple Pay, or any other features that are fully operational and ready to go and then not offer them to a country where the masses are ready to buy and they have supply on the ready to ship? I can't think of a single, logical business tactic that would make Apple not want to make as much money as possible from Canada.
    If Apple put the same effort into getting their services into other countries as they do the USA it would happen a lot quicker than it does.

    Yes, regulatory approval etc does take time and laws vary country to country. But there are frequent examples where Apple has been pushing right up to the last minutes to get a new feature ready for approval at launch in the USA and then taking years to make it to other countries.

    Lets take Apple Pay Cash as an example, apart from the USA where is it? Apple Pay is heavily supported by UK banks, I don’t think a single major bank does not support it.

    But despite the UK being a key market with almost 50% iOS market share there is still no Apple Pay Cash support.

    Sure, Apple is certainly working on it. But not with any urgency etc.
    williamlondon
  • Reply 12 of 34
    entropysentropys Posts: 4,166member
    Soli said:
    saarek said:
    I don’t understand why Apple is so slow with international rollouts of new functions. :/
    Apple has always treated their non US customers as second class citizens. That’s not going to change.
    How does it benefit Apple to have gov't clearance for the ECG, banks lined up for Apple Pay, or any other features that are fully operational and ready to go and then not offer them to a country where the masses are ready to buy and they have supply on the ready to ship? I can't think of a single, logical business tactic that would make Apple not want to make as much money as possible from Canada.
    Logical? There is no logic to it. Apple constantly leaves money on the table.  It always has. Look at the glacial pace  Apple Maps, or Siri is improved and updated. Both products that have provided endless opportunity for Apple haters to bag out the company. You would think it urgent. But apparently not. 

    Apple is a company that requires a fair bit of emotional investment to be fully immersed in the ecosystem. And it is hard more and more often to justify. If services are so important for the future, then services require a full commitment, regular updates, and rapid roll out.

    Maybe the executives are too busy showing how full of good they are to to be bothered? They get paid the mega bucks anyway,

    Glacial roll outs for hardware are nothing new either : *cough* Mac mini; MBA; and there isn’t a current tech iMac either, at Christmas. Apple’s flagship computer is out of date but priced like it is new.
    edited December 2018
  • Reply 13 of 34
    jbdragonjbdragon Posts: 2,311member
    saarek said:
    Soli said:
    saarek said:
    I don’t understand why Apple is so slow with international rollouts of new functions. :/
    Apple has always treated their non US customers as second class citizens. That’s not going to change.
    How does it benefit Apple to have gov't clearance for the ECG, banks lined up for Apple Pay, or any other features that are fully operational and ready to go and then not offer them to a country where the masses are ready to buy and they have supply on the ready to ship? I can't think of a single, logical business tactic that would make Apple not want to make as much money as possible from Canada.
    If Apple put the same effort into getting their services into other countries as they do the USA it would happen a lot quicker than it does.

    Yes, regulatory approval etc does take time and laws vary country to country. But there are frequent examples where Apple has been pushing right up to the last minutes to get a new feature ready for approval at launch in the USA and then taking years to make it to other countries.

    Lets take Apple Pay Cash as an example, apart from the USA where is it? Apple Pay is heavily supported by UK banks, I don’t think a single major bank does not support it.

    But despite the UK being a key market with almost 50% iOS market share there is still no Apple Pay Cash support.

    Sure, Apple is certainly working on it. But not with any urgency etc.

    I think Apple Pay Cash uses the Discover Network.  So that may not be something Apple is allowed to do/use in the UK.   Apple may need Visa or Mastercard to get that feature, and they may want to charge a fee to use it where it's FREE to use here and so that is one of the hold ups.  Things are not as simple as many people would think they are.

    The UK or the EU could always create some new Phone OS and make phones for it and release everything for those phones FIRST for the EU and UK. That would be how it was.  You would be focused on your own market first as everyone would expect.  I'm all for Apple getting all these features out there as fast as possible, but they have to follow the laws of every country.  It really is a global mess that is not going to change any time soon.  We still have a growing list of Banks just getting Apple Pay support here.

    There are other options besides Apple Pay Cash that also work with Android.

  • Reply 14 of 34
    SoliSoli Posts: 10,035member
    entropys said:
    Soli said:
    saarek said:
    I don’t understand why Apple is so slow with international rollouts of new functions. :/
    Apple has always treated their non US customers as second class citizens. That’s not going to change.
    How does it benefit Apple to have gov't clearance for the ECG, banks lined up for Apple Pay, or any other features that are fully operational and ready to go and then not offer them to a country where the masses are ready to buy and they have supply on the ready to ship? I can't think of a single, logical business tactic that would make Apple not want to make as much money as possible from Canada.
    Logical? There is no logic to it. Apple constantly leaves money on the table.  It always has. Look at the glacial pace  Apple Maps, or Siri is improved and updated. Both products that have provided endless opportunity for Apple haters to bag out the company. You would think it urgent. But apparently not. 

    Apple is a company that requires a fair bit of emotional investment to be fully immersed in the ecosystem. And it is hard more and more often to justify. If services are so important for the future, then services require a full commitment, regular updates, and rapid roll out.

    Maybe the executives are too busy showing how full of good they are to to be bothered? They get paid the mega bucks anyway,

    Glacial roll outs for hardware are nothing new either : *cough* Mac mini; MBA; and there isn’t a current tech iMac either, at Christmas. Apple’s flagship computer is out of date but priced like it is new.
    A company not doing exactly what we want doesn't mean that a company isn't doing what they believe is best for their bottom line.

    edited December 2018 StrangeDays
  • Reply 15 of 34
    jdgazjdgaz Posts: 404member
    I don’t understand why Apple is so slow with international rollouts of new functions. :/
    Typically the problem is not Apple, it’s that each country has its own rules and bureaucracies to wade through. Who knows what’s really happening here. I know that I don’t often trust government workers to have a solid handle on what’s going on.
    Canada is probably holding out for Blackberries version.  :-) 
    JWSCrazorpit
  • Reply 16 of 34
    SoliSoli Posts: 10,035member
    jbdragon said:
    saarek said:
    Soli said:
    saarek said:
    I don’t understand why Apple is so slow with international rollouts of new functions. :/
    Apple has always treated their non US customers as second class citizens. That’s not going to change.
    How does it benefit Apple to have gov't clearance for the ECG, banks lined up for Apple Pay, or any other features that are fully operational and ready to go and then not offer them to a country where the masses are ready to buy and they have supply on the ready to ship? I can't think of a single, logical business tactic that would make Apple not want to make as much money as possible from Canada.
    If Apple put the same effort into getting their services into other countries as they do the USA it would happen a lot quicker than it does.

    Yes, regulatory approval etc does take time and laws vary country to country. But there are frequent examples where Apple has been pushing right up to the last minutes to get a new feature ready for approval at launch in the USA and then taking years to make it to other countries.

    Lets take Apple Pay Cash as an example, apart from the USA where is it? Apple Pay is heavily supported by UK banks, I don’t think a single major bank does not support it.

    But despite the UK being a key market with almost 50% iOS market share there is still no Apple Pay Cash support.

    Sure, Apple is certainly working on it. But not with any urgency etc.

    I think Apple Pay Cash uses the Discover Network.  So that may not be something Apple is allowed to do/use in the UK.   Apple may need Visa or Mastercard to get that feature, and they may want to charge a fee to use it where it's FREE to use here and so that is one of the hold ups.  Things are not as simple as many people would think they are.

    The UK or the EU could always create some new Phone OS and make phones for it and release everything for those phones FIRST for the EU and UK. That would be how it was.  You would be focused on your own market first as everyone would expect.  I'm all for Apple getting all these features out there as fast as possible, but they have to follow the laws of every country.  It really is a global mess that is not going to change any time soon.  We still have a growing list of Banks just getting Apple Pay support here.

    There are other options besides Apple Pay Cash that also work with Android.
    Yes, it does use Discover.


    It's amazing that some people actually believe Apple is obstinately refusing to add Apple Pay Cash in the UK when there are only positive reasons with zero hurdles or drawbacks. Not knowing a reason doesn't mean a reason doesn't exist.
    edited December 2018 razorpitStrangeDaysbageljoey
  • Reply 17 of 34
    JWSCJWSC Posts: 1,203member
    entropys said:
    Logical? There is no logic to it. Apple constantly leaves money on the table.  It always has. Look at the glacial pace  Apple Maps, or Siri is improved and updated. Both products that have provided endless opportunity for Apple haters to bag out the company. You would think it urgent. But apparently not. 
    I concur with you on Siri’s glacial pace.  But Apple has made great strides with Maps over the last few years.
  • Reply 18 of 34
    Oh, Canada ...
  • Reply 19 of 34
    bitmod said:
    “The feature is available in the United States after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration cleared it for sale, making the smartwatch the first consumer device to do so without requiring medical review.”

     Alivecore has the Kardia ECG that works very well and was approved by medical review. I imagine if one was truly concerned about their heart they would go with this device that is far more accurate, vastly less expensive, integrated with real-time medical review by doctors, or transmitted to you own. Even comes with a clip to fit to your smartphone. https://www.alivecor.com
    They also support the iwatch.

     The watch probably isn’t accurate enough to pass medical review - thus the legal tie-up in other countries, not so much for the feature, but the ‘marketing’ aspect of it being a medical device. Neither are as good as an 8 point lead at a hospital - but can indicate something isn’t right with rhythm.
    What a load of nonsense, per usual. 

    - I don't see why the Alivecore portable finger-based ECG would be any more accurate. What is your evidence?
    - its $100, not "vastly less expensive"
    - it also costs $10/mo for unlimited cloud storage of results
    - but it's also a single-purpose device, and requires carrying around, making it less useful than an ECG already in your daily watch
    - yes, the Apple Watch ECG is accurate enough to "pass medical review"
    - you can transmit your Apple Watch ECG to your doctor
    - there is no such thing as an iwatch. 

    ...you could at least try, you know. 
    edited December 2018 anantksundaramwilliamlondonbrucemc
  • Reply 20 of 34
    entropys said:
    Soli said:
    saarek said:
    I don’t understand why Apple is so slow with international rollouts of new functions. :/
    Apple has always treated their non US customers as second class citizens. That’s not going to change.
    How does it benefit Apple to have gov't clearance for the ECG, banks lined up for Apple Pay, or any other features that are fully operational and ready to go and then not offer them to a country where the masses are ready to buy and they have supply on the ready to ship? I can't think of a single, logical business tactic that would make Apple not want to make as much money as possible from Canada.
    Glacial roll outs for hardware are nothing new either : *cough* Mac mini; MBA; and there isn’t a current tech iMac either, at Christmas. Apple’s flagship computer is out of date but priced like it is new.
    You have a misunderstanding of Apple Macs. The Mac Pro is not their "flagship" computer, it is their workstation-class computer. That does not make it a flagship or a favored son, it is simply a different category of machine for different use cases. It not even their only or most recent workstation machine any longer, that would be the iMac Pro. 
    Rayz2016williamlondon
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