The integration syncs Oura’s sleep and temperature data with Mira’s clinical-grade monitoring
Hormonal health company Mira has announced a partnership with Oura, creating an integration that combines its lab-grade hormone concentrations with data from the smart ring.
The collaboration allows Oura Ring users to sync their sleep, readiness, and body temperature metrics directly into the Mira app, placing them alongside quantitative readings for four key hormones: Luteinizing Hormone (LH), Estrogen (E3G), Progesterone (PdG), and Follicle-Stimulating Hormone (FSH).
Mira’s hardware uses a proprietary fluorescence-based detection technology—the same method used in clinical labs—to provide more precise numeric concentrations than simple ‘high/low’ estimates found in traditional test strips.
What Oura data brings to the Mira platform
By layering Oura’s continuous physiological tracking over these hormonal snapshots, users can see how shifts in their cycle or perimenopausal transitions are directly impacting their recovery and energy levels.
(Credit: Mira)
For instance, a user can track how a spike in estrogen correlates with their basal body temperature (BBT) trends, or how the progesterone surge after ovulation affects their deep sleep quality.
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The integration is specifically aimed at those navigating fertility, the menstrual cycle, and the stages of menopause.
By providing a ‘Hormonal Fingerprint’, the system helps users identify their fertile window with greater accuracy than calendar-based methods or temperature tracking alone.
Advancing women’s health
The combined dataset can also be shared with healthcare providers, helping users substantiate their hormonal symptoms with data rather than simply relying on anecdotal evidence.
It’s not the only integration related to women’s health and wearables we’ve seen recently, either.
Last week, Garmin announced that its watch data can now be integrated into the Hello Inside platform, combining CGM and self-reported data to better inform women’s metabolic health.
It’s a topic we’ve also been covering in depth for years—including in this PULSE Podcast, where we discuss the rise of continuous hormone monitoring and the startups leading the space.
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One thing is for sure: this won’t be the last major wearable tech partnership we see in women’s metabolic health in 2026.
