A common question about calculo-thermal devices: how can they work without cervical mucus, a key marker in the manual symptothermal method?
The answer lies in intelligent risk management and in the limits of mucus observation itself.
Cervical mucus assessment is highly subjective and depends on individual ability to recognize and interpret changes in consistency and quality. Misinterpretations are common, and the mucus-only method has a steep learning curve.
Daysy compensates for this in two ways. First, the algorithm opens the fertile window (red light) early, based on your earliest likely ovulation day, with a spermatozoa-survival buffer built in 2. Second, the data shows that very early ovulation, where mucus observation would matter most, is extraordinarily rare: in the Soumpasis 2020 analysis of 75,981 cycles, no ovulation was observed before cycle day 8 4. And even when very early ovulation does occur, the successful pregnancy rate in those cycles is only 9.3%; 1 the body's own biology acts as a safeguard, because an early-ovulation cycle often leaves the uterine lining too thin for implantation. Daysy's rule structure operates comfortably inside this safety zone.
Cervical mucus can still be documented in the DaysyDay App for your own observation. It simply does not enter the algorithm, because the algorithm does not need a subjective input to do its job reliably.