Move More, Move Better: A Narrative Review of Wearable Technologies and Their Application to Precision Health

Recent technological and methodological advances have seen a rapid increase in the development and use of wearable technologies, advancing the study and practice of precision health for individuals across real-world contexts and health statuses. This narrative review highlights the recent scientific...

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Veröffentlicht in:Health psychology 2021-11, Vol.40 (11), p.803-810
Hauptverfasser: Puterman, Eli, Pauly, Theresa, Ruissen, Geralyn, Nelson, Benjamin, Faulkner, Guy
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container_end_page 810
container_issue 11
container_start_page 803
container_title Health psychology
container_volume 40
creator Puterman, Eli
Pauly, Theresa
Ruissen, Geralyn
Nelson, Benjamin
Faulkner, Guy
description Recent technological and methodological advances have seen a rapid increase in the development and use of wearable technologies, advancing the study and practice of precision health for individuals across real-world contexts and health statuses. This narrative review highlights the recent scientific advances and emerging challenges of wearable technologies. We first review the advantages of monitoring physical activity using wearable technologies over self-reports and examine commercially available devices' reliability and validity. Next, we point to the utility of wearable technologies in naturalistic environments to examine temporal associations between physical activity with other health behaviors, psychological processes, and ambulatory markers of disease that can inform the clinical practice of precision health. We further identify studies that use wearable technologies to facilitate behavior change across different populations, highlighting the need to adapt interventions for different individuals, contexts, and disorders. Balanced against these opportunities, we also highlight several challenges facing the field of precision monitoring.
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); MEDLINE; PsycARTICLES
subjects Behavior Change
Clinical medicine
Clinical Practice
Exercise
Health behavior
Health Promotion
Health Status
Human
Humans
Intervention
Mental health
Narratives
Physical Activity
Precision Medicine
Psychological processes
Reliability
Reproducibility of Results
Self-Report
Technology
Wearable Devices
Wearable Electronic Devices
title Move More, Move Better: A Narrative Review of Wearable Technologies and Their Application to Precision Health
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