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NexRing setup

NexRing setup and wearing guide.

Use NexRing as a supported wearable context layer for longitudinal trends such as heart-rate patterns, sleep-related insights, activity context and temperature-variation signals that may support preventive care discussions.

Operational guide

Use the workflow as structured support, not as a replacement for professional judgement.

These instructions are written for Ambulant+ supported workflows. Device readings, recordings and trend data should be interpreted by an appropriate clinician in context.

Sizing before setup

Correct sizing improves comfort, signal quality and day-to-day adherence.

Use the sizing kit to confirm ring size before unboxing the final device where applicable.

Choose a fit that is secure but comfortable enough for regular wear.

Select your preferred finish where available, such as silver, black, gold or rose gold.

Contact support before forcing a size that feels uncomfortable.

Best wearing position

Signal quality and durability depend on how the ring is worn.

Wear on the index finger of the less-dominant hand where possible.

This position may provide stronger pulse signals and reduce wear from frequent contact with surfaces.

Align the light sensor to the palm-side or inner side of the finger.

The ring can be worn on another comfortable finger if required, but consistency matters for trend interpretation.

First pairing

Initial pairing should be done slowly and correctly.

Charge the ring to 100% before first setup.

Keep the ring on the charger during initial pairing.

Turn on Bluetooth and location permissions where the mobile device requires them.

Open the NexRing app, add a new ring and confirm the device shown during pairing.

Allow up to 24 hours for fuller data population after setup.

How to use the data

NexRing data is most useful as longitudinal context, not a single isolated number.

Use instant readings such as heart-rate checks where available.

Review sleep, activity and temperature-variation trends over time.

Use temperature-variation context carefully in fertility or wellness discussions, as supportive information rather than diagnosis.

Share relevant trends with clinicians during Ambulant+ consultations when clinically appropriate.

Safety and governance boundaries.

Ambulant+ resource content supports preparation, documentation and care continuity. It does not create an emergency service and must not delay urgent in-person care where symptoms, readings, recordings or clinician judgement require escalation.

Escalate when appropriate.

Wearable trend data should not replace urgent clinical care.

Sudden severe symptoms require medical attention even if wearable readings appear reassuring.

Fertility-related signals are supportive context and should not be presented as guaranteed prediction or diagnosis.

Remove the ring and seek support if there is discomfort, skin irritation, swelling or device damage.

Next step

Build this into a guided Ambulant+ workflow.

Patients, clinicians, medical aids and programme teams can request a guided walkthrough to see how resources, device workflows, bookings, diagnostics and fulfilment connect inside the Ambulant+ ecosystem.

Book demo