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Sep 20th, 2016, 7:47 am
iCare Hearing Test Pro v3.1.0
Requirements: 3.0 and up
Overview: Are your ears still young?
With this free app, you can easily measure your ear’s age simply by listening to different frequency sounds.

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Are your ears still young?
With this free app, you can easily measure your ear’s age simply by listening to different frequency sounds.
It is said that as you continue to get older, it becomes more difficult to hear high pitched sounds.
Simply measure your ear’s age by using iCare Hearing Test.
You can measure your ear’s age by playing different frequency sounds, and simply answering whether or not your could hear it.
After testing, the sounds you could not hear will be displayed.

iCare Hearing Test--Mobile measuring blood pressure, heart rate, blood lipids, blood oxygen, vision, colorblind, hearing, lung capacity, breath rate, psychological index.
It does not require any peripherals, only use a mobile phone measure blood pressure, heart rate, vision, hearing, lung capacity, psychological index, colorblind and other physical data, and provides targeted health programs .

"The world's 1st blood pressure measurement APP"
"The world's 1st blood lipid measurements APP"
"The world's 1st continuous heart rate measurement APP"
"The world's 1st pulse wave acquisition and analysis software"
"The world's most functional examination APP"

Reliable data:
A large number of user authentication;
1.Heart rate error of plus or minus 3 or less.
2.Blood pressure for more than 95% of users, the error is within plus or minus 12.
3.Blood Oxygen error plus or minus 2 or less.
4.Identification and accuracy of high blood cholesterol more than 80%.

Features:
1.Measure the user's blood pressure, heart rate, blood lipids, blood oxygen, vision, colorblind, hearing, Lung capacity, breath rate, psychological index and other physical data through the phone.
2.Measure Physical data by Bluetooth Sphygmomanometer, Bluetooth wristband, Bluetooth body fat scales, Bluetooth ECG instrument .
3.Statistics daily health data and make statistics and trend analysis.
4.Based on the user's health data and trends, to provide health alert service.
5.Without wearable device, super-convenient pedometer.
6.Games and interactive training programs, statistics and manage daily physical activity and sport type.

This app has no advertisements

More Info:
Code: Select allhttps://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=comm.cchong.HearingCheckPro

Download Instructions:
https://dailyuploads.net/vjfj6rb6m6ay

Mirror:
https://drop.download/ar95wt9kksu2
https://userscloud.com/ntvo920w5gys
Sep 20th, 2016, 7:47 am

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Sep 20th, 2016, 3:45 pm
I'm sorry, I don't think this is a valuable application. I used it twice about 3-4 updates ago. Once I did it as it should be done and once I clicked randomly - and in both cases I had the same verdict. My hearing was perfect. A working app should include different results for different data but this didn't. Can other Users verify it? Maybe the results are better now after so many updates.
Sep 20th, 2016, 3:45 pm
Sep 20th, 2016, 6:54 pm
This is the only blood pressure app that I know that can do blood pressure measures, and it is accurate to about -+2 in compare to my stand-alone electric blood pressure monitor.
it is good enough accurate to give you a hint whether your B.P is very high or very low ( if you really can't fill it by your own senses ).
Sep 20th, 2016, 6:54 pm
Sep 20th, 2016, 7:35 pm
night_mare007 wrote:This is the only blood pressure app that I know that can do blood pressure measures, and it is accurate to about -+2 in compare to my stand-alone electric blood pressure monitor.
it is good enough accurate to give you a hint whether your B.P is very high or very low ( if you really can't fill it by your own senses ).

I had a problem with the hearing test. It's possible the B.P. test is better, I haven't tried it.
Sep 20th, 2016, 7:35 pm
Sep 21st, 2016, 9:25 am
To your question if this hearing test app is one you can rely upon to assess your hearing capacity, even if roughly, to almost medically accurate levels, the answer is a straight NO. I can go in to the scientific details of why that's not possible by taking you on a journey from the external auditory meatus to the membranous labyrinth and get into the involved biomechanics but I'm sure it'll take more than one reply here and about a session or two in a clinic perhaps.
As a man of science with love for apps, I recommend that you use this app and frankly any app that states it can measure your blood pressure, hearing, lung function etc etc. just for the purposes of fun and never ever draw serious binding conclusions from it. You can not measure these health parameters with such simplicity. One such parameter was heartbeat which technically and scientifically was amenable to measurement by an external sensor and so it made its way to android watches, smartphone sensors and apps all over it, but then a series of studies later, it was found only half of the pulse rates identified were actually true or within a reasonable margin of error. The others were inaccurate and pre-fed defaults that measured steps etc etc. There's a lot of details I'll spare you here, but ultimately, my point is use these apps for fun. In a few decades perhaps we'll able to do so much more with apps, even read brain signalling, but that app must come along with some sophisticated wiring and a moderately-heavy equipment by the side.
So for now at least, take it easy on these apps and enjoy them for their sparkly numbers and animations :)
Sep 21st, 2016, 9:25 am
Sep 21st, 2016, 10:04 am
All these ICare thingies are pranks, IMHO.
There is simply no way to check blood pressure, O2 level, lung capacity etc without the proper medical sensors.
A hearing test with non-linear ear plug headsets driven by a crappy audio amplifier in a mobile phone is a mere joke.

From that perspective these apps are downright dangerous. Tey will hide real and serious medical problems, by simply giving random readings within the typical data range.

Only the pulse may be measured accurately, using a decent built-in camera in translucent places (e.g. the pinky against sunlight).
But then: use a watch and count your pulse at the wrist for 15sec - voila!
Sep 21st, 2016, 10:04 am