Mira integrates ŌURA trends into app
Mira announced an integration with ŌURA that let Mira users view Oura sleep, readiness, and temperature trends alongside their hormone measurements in the Mira app, a move described as intended to show how hormonal changes relate to daily sleep and function.
The companies said the combined data streams aimed to move users beyond isolated metrics so patterns could be observed across different health journeys. ŌURA Members' consent to share data with Mira was described as foundational to the integration and to providing the control the companies said was necessary for meaningful data sharing.
The integration displayed Oura sleep, readiness, and temperature trends directly in the Mira app next to hormone data, bringing those streams together in a single interface. The companies presented the linkage as a combination of Mira hormone measurements with Oura continuous biometric signals so users could compare trends within the app.
The collaboration covered use cases that the companies listed as perimenopause and menopause, fertility and menstrual cycle awareness, and correlating fatigue or disrupted sleep with hormonal shifts. The Mira x ŌURA integration was stated to be now available to Mira users, and Mira's company background and founding date appeared in the release as contextual information.
“By connecting hormone data with daily health signals, we're giving women insights they can act on - whether managing fertility, navigating perimenopause, or addressing hormonal imbalances,” said Sylvia Kang, CEO and founder of Mira
“Hormonal changes play a critical role in how women feel each day and are a through line that connects so many aspects of health, from first periods, to menstrual cycles, pregnancy, perimenopause and beyond,” said Disaster Recovery (DR). Chris Curry, MD, PhD, Clinical Director of Women's Health at ŌURA. “By combining Mira's lab-grade hormone data with Oura's continuous biometrics, we're helping women see how hormonal shifts show up in their everyday lives. This integrated view supports our goal of always supporting body literacy.”