University of Washington researchers built a smartphone app that tracks fetal heart rate as accurately as clinic tools. No extra hardware, no gel, just the phone’s own speaker and microphone.
It’s called DopFone. The system plays an 18kHz tone and listens for the echo. A machine learning model estimates the heart rate from subtle shifts in that reflected sound.
In a study of 23 pregnant patients, the app landed within about 2 beats per minute of a medical-grade Doppler. That’s well inside the 8 BPM margin doctors accept.
The idea is to give more people access to regular fetal monitoring without expensive gear or constant clinic visits. But the tech has limits, and it’s not ready for prime time.
How it works and where it stumbles
You hold the phone’s microphone against your abdomen for one minute. The speaker plays a low tone that travels through tissue. When that sound bounces back, the baby’s heartbeats create tiny frequency shifts the phone picks up.
The team tested the app on patients between 19 and 39 weeks pregnant. It held up across different phone positions and angles. That matters at home, where nobody’s guiding you. But accuracy dropped slightly for people with higher BMIs. The readings stayed within normal limits, just not as tight.
The study also excluded anyone with an irregular fetal heartbeat. Those are emergencies, not the place for experimental tech. So we don’t know how the app handles abnormal rhythms yet.
What the app can’t do yet
DopFone only works for singleton pregnancies right now. The team hasn’t tested it on twins or triplets. Two heartbeats would complicate the signal.
All testing happened on iPhones in a controlled medical setting. How well does it perform on Android? In a noisy living room? We don’t know yet. The researchers plan to gather more real-world data.
The study focused on the second and third trimesters, with no data for first-trimester monitoring.
And since everyone in the study had healthy heart rates, the app’s ability to flag distress signals like tachycardia is unproven.

When you might actually use it
Don’t look for DopFone in app stores yet. The team needs more data from everyday conditions first. They’re also training the model on more diverse hardware and patient populations.
The long-term vision is a free or low-cost app that works on any phone. That could change things for people in rural areas or low-resource regions where traditional Dopplers are scarce.
It might also help high-risk patients monitor more often between doctor visits. The researchers stress this isn’t a replacement for medical care. If it arrives, it’ll be a measurement tool, not a diagnostic one. You’d still need a doctor to interpret the data.










































