I don't think a wrist device would help.
As the great Yogi Berra once said, "50% of this game is 90% mental."
There are physical/mental devices, ways to think of what you're doing, but you have to do it. The basic idea behind turning the ball early is your body's subconscious or unconscious lack of faith in your ability to make the ball hook. So your body tries to help it. I do it also, so it's not like I'm talking down to you. You have to truly believe it will hook and, of course, we know it will. You and your body have to allow it to hook. Confidence in many levels or factors of your game is an essential. If you don't have faith in you, no one else can or will.
Devices:
- Lead with your ring finger. Keep it facing your target all the way through the arm swing.
- Lead with the open part of your elbow, the inside crook of it. Keep it facing your target all the way through the arm swing.
- Keep the palm of your hand facing your target ... same as above.
Keep your hand movements to the barest minimum. The more you do, the more there is to go wrong, and the more intense and continuous practice is required to keep everything in synch. KISS is part of the "bible" of bowling.
You can't tell yourself "NOT" to do something, because your brain never hears the "not" or the "don't". You have to use positives.
Since you know you're turning the ball early, one thing you could do in practice is to, once you've delivered a good ball, one that you know you didn't turn early, think back during the arm swing of how you felt and what you were thinking at the time. Learn to teach yourself the memory of the good release, the good delivery. Think of how it feels. During practice you don't have to worry about scores; worry, practice feeling (with touch, not emotion) the good release.
I have little doubt that when you do turn the ball early, you're not focused on the bare necessities. Some other thought is being added or subtracted by your brain or subconscious. You're not allowing yourself to just "do it". You may be thinking of too many things. I'm not sure what it is, but you should know or learn what is distracting you.