Sarah Ford | January 28, 2014

Google Is Developing Contact Lenses to Measure Glucose Levels for People With Diabetes

Source:

By Craig Idlebrook

Google has announced the development of contact lenses that can measure glucose levels! The tech giant has put an end to fingerpricks forever! Let the ticker-tape parade begin!

Wait, no. Let鈥檚 take a deep breath.

The name 鈥淕oogle鈥 brings to mind futuristic tech advancements that can revolutionize life as we know it. After all, the company dominates search engine technology and cute cat videos, is on track to develop the first commercially-sold self-driving car, and seemingly has more money to spend than many industrialized nations. Having mastered the Internet, the company is turning its attention to the one sector of our economy with the most growth potential: health care.

Last year, Google made a few diabetes-related headlines when it announced it was throwing a few million dollars at a company working to develop oral insulin (see ). And now its secretive 鈥淕oogle X鈥 division has announced it has developed a contact lens that can measure glucose. When Google talks about diabetes, people listen.

The Google X blogpost announcement sounds promising, describing 鈥渁 smart contact lens that鈥檚 built to measure glucose levels in tears using a tiny wireless chip and miniaturized glucose sensor that are embedded between two layers of soft contact lens material.鈥 The developers say it can measure a reading per second, and may even come with built-in early warning devices to warn a wearer of fluctuations in BG levels. All good stuff.

But if you peek past the headlines, it becomes apparent that this device is still in the beginning stages of development. Clinical trials are underway and Google is in 鈥渄iscussions鈥 with the FDA, but there really is no definitive timeline for when, or if, this product will make it to market. FDA approval is notoriously slow for any novel diabetes treatment device, as well; Mannkind hopes 2014 is the year for its inhalable insulin device to gain FDA approval after years of regulatory limbo, but no one is holding their breath. Also absent from the post is any mention of accuracy. It鈥檚 great if this device can measure glucose, but it鈥檚 more important that it measure glucose accurately.

Get Resources and Insights Straight To Your Inbox

Explore More Articles

February is Marfan Awareness Month!

February 3, 2025

Marfan syndrome affects an estimated 1 in 5,000 people regardless of race, ethnicity, or gender, and experts estimate听that nearly half the people who have Marfan…

Read Article

February is Cancer Prevention Month

February 3, 2025

A substantial proportion of cancers could be prevented, including all cancers caused by tobacco use and other unhealthy behaviors. Excluding non-melanoma skin cancer, at least…

Read Article

Celebrating the Agents of Change this Black History Month

February 3, 2025

During Black History Month, which takes place each year during the month of February, there is much to celebrate about the past achievements and impact…

Read Article

Get Resources and Insights Straight To Your Inbox

Receive our monthly/bi-monthly newsletter filled with information about causes, nonprofit impact, and topics important for corporate social responsibility and employee engagement professionals, including disaster response, workplace giving, matching gifts, employee assistance funds, volunteering, scholarship award program management, grantmaking, and other philanthropic initiatives.

newsletter-mock