What’s the deal?
The Owlet Dream Sock baby sleep tracker is now 24% off during Amazon’s Prime Big Deal Days, available for $228 (and it’s FSA/HSA eligible!).
Also: Amazon Prime Day deals live: We found 165+ of the best deals for October’s Big Deal Days
ZDNET’s key takeaways
- The Owlet Dream Sock<!–> is an FDA-cleared baby sleep tracker for $299 (currently $228 through October Prime Day).
- The Owlet Dream Sock goes beyond your standard baby monitor by tracking your child’s heart rate, blood oxygen, and sleep patterns. It has three alarms: a yellow incorrect fit alarm, a purple abnormal reading alarm, and a blue alarm when the sock is out of range or low battery.
- While false low oxygen and abnormal heart rate alarms are exceedingly rare (I’ve only had a handful in our 7+ years using Owlet products), I wish there were a separate low battery alarm instead of the same out-of-range alarm.
Is it safe to say that all new parents need more sleep? This is partly why baby monitors were invented in the first place. I still remember when video monitors for babies became mainstream, which meant I no longer needed to haul around a walkie-talkie-looking device around my house and now carried a screen instead.
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Now, trackers like the Owlet Dream Sock–> have become so sophisticated that they can measure your baby’s blood oxygen levels, heart rate, and sleep cycles and alert you if anything reads unusually.
The Owlet Dream Sock lets you easily track your baby’s or toddler’s sleep as a wearable that goes on your child’s foot. It tracks sleep patterns, oxygen levels, and heart rate.
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Such wearables have been a household essential for me, particularly because my family has a history of febrile seizures, which can cause a sense of unease when my children are sleeping. In hopes of helping other new parents who may experience similar discomfort, let me share why a sleep-tracking baby sock is highly recommended.
How the Owlet tracks sleep and other measures
Similar to an Apple Watch<!–> or Fitbit–>, the Dream Sock, is worn by your baby while they sleep. It tracks their heart rate and oxygen levels to map their sleep stages. It also alerts your smartphone if your baby is awake or shows any signs of irregularity.
The box has the sensor, a base station, and four fabric socks in two sizes to fit babies from birth through 18 months. For the years after, Owlet offers a Plus option that includes two additional toddler-sized socks to fit kids from 30 to 55 lbs.
The sock holds a photoplethysmography (PPG) sensor that the baby wears on their foot, similar to what you wear in the ER to track your heart rate. Through the Dream Sock, the Owlet app can track heart rate, average oxygen levels, noise, wakings, and movements to learn your baby’s baseline behaviors and measurements.
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Once that baseline is measured, the base station will send an alert to your phone, suggesting that your baby needs your attention, whenever the sensor on the sock detects a deviation from those numbers.
Sleep regressions and tracking
As a millennial parent, I’ve always sought guidance from educational apps and the occasional forum group for parents to get me through the initial challenges of parenthood. These resources helped me navigate sleep regressions, for example, and the Owlet Dream Sock has been similarly helpful.
With enough usage, the Owlet app builds a schedule for when you should the baby’s next sleep or nap should start. Part of this depends on the measured baseline and their age, which you can enter manually. For times when your baby isn’t sleeping with the sock — there are days when I drop my one-year-old off at the daycare, for example — you can input their sleep cadence for the Owlet app to work from.
Also: I wore an Apple Watch and a Fitbit to track my sleep. Here’s how the data compared
The app also features historical sleep data, so you can view your baby’s sleep patterns and see how they change during sleep regressions, growth spurts, or illnesses.
Why I bought a sleep-tracking baby sock
I first bought a smart baby sock for my firstborn six years ago, hoping it would help me monitor my baby’s breathing and give me enough tranquility to sleep without worry.
As first-time parents, my husband and I were worried about sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), so we’d have our newborn wear the Owlet more for peace of mind than anything else, and we knew that we weren’t the only ones who thought that. According to a medical study conducted from 2015 to 2017, the Owlet Smart Sock helped 94% of parents sleep better at night.