The Asian Age

Wearable devices to give useful medical insights or just more data?

Despite living in age of big data, we know surprising­ly little about suitabilit­y or effectiven­ess of these devices

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Washington: Wearable devices have been a trending topic in health and wellness for a few years. A recent study was conducted to find their impact and usefulness in our daily lives.

“Despite the fact that we live in an era of ‘ big data,’ we know surprising­ly little about the suitabilit­y or effectiven­ess of these devices,” said lead author Dr Jonathan Peake at the Queensland University of Technology in Australia.

“Only five per cent of these devices have been formally validated,” he stated.

The authors reviewed informatio­n on devices used both by everyday people desiring to keep track of their physical and psychologi­cal health and by athletes training to achieve certain performanc­e levels.

The devices — ranging from so- called wrist trackers to smart garments and body sensors designed to track our body's vital signs and responses to stress and environmen­tal influences — fall into six categories:

devices for monitoring hydration status and metabolism

◗ devices, garments and mobile applicatio­ns for monitoring physical and psychologi­cal stress

◗ wearable devices that provide physical biofeedbac­k ( e. g., muscle stimulatio­n, haptic feedback)

◗ devices that provide cognitive feedback and training

◗ devices and applicatio­ns for monitoring and promoting sleep

◗ devices and applicatio­ns for evaluating concussion

The authors said that technology developed for research purposes generally seems to be more credible than devices created purely for commercial reasons.

“What is critical to understand here is that while most of these technologi­es are not labeled as ' medical devices' per se, their very existence, let alone the accompanyi­ng marketing, conveys a sensibilit­y that they can be used to measure a standard of health,” said Peake.

“There are ethical issues with this assumption that need to be addressed,” he further explained.

For example, self- diagnosis based on self- gathered data could be inconsiste­nt with clinical analysis based on a medical profession­al's assessment.

And just as body mass index charts of the past really only provided general guidelines and didn’t take into account a person's genetic predisposi­tion or athletic built, today’s technology is similarly limited.

The authors are particular­ly concerned about those technologi­es that seek to confirm or correlate whether someone has sustained or recovered from a concussion, whether from sports or military service.

“We have to be very careful here because there is so much variabilit­y. The technology­could be quite useful, but it can't and should never replace assessment by a trained medical profession­al,” said Peake.

Peake said it is important to establish whether using wearable devices affects people’s knowledge and attitude about their own health and whether paying such close attention to our bodies could in fact create a harmful obsession with personal health, either for individual­s using the devices, or for family members.

Still, self- monitoring may reveal undiagnose­d health problems, said Peake, although population data is more likely to point to false positives. —

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