Lawsuit alleges Apple Watch's blood oxygen sensor 'racially biased'; accuracy problems reported industry-wide
Lawsuit alleges Apple Watch's blood oxygen sensor 'racially biased'; accuracy problems reported industry-wide · ABC News

Apple is facing a proposed class action lawsuit alleging the Apple Watch's blood oxygen sensor is racially biased against people with dark skin tones.

Experts say accuracy problems have been reported for these devices industry-wide. It's not clear if Apple's products are any better or worse than others.

The product's feature, the Blood Oxygen app, allows users to measure their blood oxygen level directly from their wrist, according to Apple's website.

The lawsuit claims plaintiff Alex Morales was aware of this feature when he purchased an Apple Watch between 2020 and 2021, assuming it would work "without regard to skin tone."

Morales alleges Apple did not disclose any potential "biases and defects" on the product's label, despite a large body of research indicating similar pulse oximetry devices -- usually placed on a fingertip -- were "significantly less accurate in measuring blood oxygen levels based on skin color," the lawsuit states.

MORE: Pulse oximeters, used to fight COVID-19, may be inaccurate on people of color: FDA

"The 'real world significance' of this bias lay unaddressed until the middle of the coronavirus pandemic, which converged with a greater awareness of structural racism which exists in many aspects of society," according to the lawsuit, which was filed on Dec. 24.

Pulse oximetry devices were widely used during the COVID-19 pandemic to monitor patients' conditions, which would help determine whether they received certain medicines, oxygen therapies and hospital beds when all were in limited supply.

The devices work by shining a light into a person's finger or wrist and sensing how much is absorbed by their red blood cells, ABC News medical contributor Dr. Darien Sutton said.

"How much light is absorbed tells you how much oxygen you have because red blood cells carry oxygen," he said. "The problem is that darker skin also absorbs light, so it can give you a falsely elevated reading."

PHOTO: Close-up of woman using pulse oximeter to measure blood oxygen saturation level and heart rate. (STOCK PHOTO/Getty Images)
PHOTO: Close-up of woman using pulse oximeter to measure blood oxygen saturation level and heart rate. (STOCK PHOTO/Getty Images)

While it has been known for decades that the technology tends to overestimate oxygen levels for darker-skinned patients, recent medical studies highlighted the negative impact on such patients. For example, Hispanic and Black patients with the coronavirus were less likely to be recognized as eligible for treatment, according to a study published in May.

Researchers say reliance on the technology and the potentially flawed readings it yielded may have contributed to greater deaths among Black and other dark-skinned patients during the pandemic.

In light of these studies, the Food and Drug Administration recently launched a review of pulse oximeter technology to improve its efficacy and accuracy for all skin pigmentations.