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Background: Fitness trackers can engage users through automated self-monitoring of physical activity. Studies evaluating the utility of fitness trackers are limited among adolescents, who are often difficult to engage in weight management treatment and are heavy technology users.
Objective: We conducted a pilot randomized trial to describe the impact of providing adolescents and caregivers with fitness trackers as an adjunct to treatment in a tertiary care weight management clinic on adolescent fitness tracker satisfaction, fitness tracker utilization patterns, and physical activity levels.
Methods: Adolescents were randomized to 1 of 2 groups (adolescent or dyad) at their initial weight management clinic visit. Adolescents received a fitness tracker and counseling around activity data in addition to standard treatment. A caregiver of adolescents in the dyad group also received a fitness tracker. Satisfaction with the fitness tracker, fitness tracker utilization patterns, and physical activity patterns were evaluated over 3 months.
Results: A total of 88 adolescents were enrolled, with 69% (61/88) being female, 36% (32/88) black, 23% (20/88) Hispanic, and 63% (55/88) with severe obesity. Most adolescents reported that the fitness tracker was helping them meet their healthy lifestyle goals (69%) and be more motivated to achieve a healthy weight (66%). Despite this, 68% discontinued use of the fitness tracker by the end of the study. There were no significant differences between the adolescent and the dyad group in outcomes, but adolescents in the dyad group were 12.2 times more likely to discontinue using their fitness tracker if their caregiver also discontinued use of their fitness tracker (95% CI 2.4-61.6). Compared with adolescents who discontinued use of the fitness tracker during the study, adolescents who continued to use the fitness tracker recorded a higher number of daily steps in months 2 and 3 of the study (mean 5760 vs 4148 in month 2, P=.005, and mean 5942 vs 3487 in month 3, P=.002).
Conclusions: Despite high levels of satisfaction with the fitness trackers, fitness tracker discontinuation rates were high, especially among adolescents whose caregivers also discontinued use of their fitness tracker. More studies are needed to determine how to sustain the use of fitness trackers among adolescents with obesity and engage caregivers in adolescent weight management interventions.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/10523 | DOI Listing |
JMIR Form Res
August 2025
Center for Interdisciplinary AI and Data Science, Ochanomizu University, 2-1-1 Otsuka, Bunkyo District, Tokyo, 112-8610, Japan, 81 359783032 ext 3032.
Background: Active commuting, such as skateboarding and kickboarding, is gaining popularity as an alternative to traditional modes of transportation such as walking and cycling. However, current activity trackers and smartphones, which rely on accelerometer data, are primarily designed to recognize symmetrical locomotive activities (eg, walking and running) and may struggle to accurately identify the unique push-push-glide motion patterns of skateboarding and kickboarding.
Objective: The primary objective of this study was to evaluate the feasibility of classifying skateboard and kickboard commuting behaviors using data from wearable sensors and smartphones.
J Asthma
September 2025
Center for the Evaluation of Value and Risk in Health, Tufts Medical Center, Boston, MA, USA.
Objective: Despite the health benefits of physical activity (PA), many individuals with asthma are not sufficiently active. Wearable devices (WD) are increasingly popular tools for promoting PA, but limited research has examined their effectiveness among individuals with asthma. This study aims to compare PA levels between WD users and non-users with asthma.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArch Phys Med Rehabil
August 2025
School of Nursing, National Defense Medical Center, Taipei, Taiwan. Electronic address:
Objective: To evaluate the effects of a 12-week digital walking exercise program on functional capacity and psychological health in individuals with mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) and examine the influence of exercise adherence.
Design: Randomized controlled trial with repeated measures.
Setting: Medical center-based recruitment with home-based intervention.
Sensors (Basel)
August 2025
Center for Advanced Photonics and Process Analysis, Munster Technological University, T12P928 Cork, Ireland.
Optical sensors have emerged as a popular technology for sensing biological and chemical analytes in various fields, including environmental monitoring, toxicology, disease/infection screening, and food processing, due to their ease of use, high sensitivity, and specificity. In this study, we introduce ColorX, an ultra-portable and smart spectrophotometric device based on a commercially available fitness tracker. ColorX exploits the in-built LEDs and photodiodes of a fitness tracker for wavelength-specific absorption measurements and can be controlled wirelessly using a companion smartphone app.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Psychol Behav Med
August 2025
Department for Psychosomatic Medicine and Psychotherapy, University for Continuing Education Krems, Krems an der Donau, Austria.
Background: Despite the benefits smartphone technology offers, our phones are available to us almost all of the time and excessive smartphone use may be linked to problematic behaviours and mental illness symptoms. Therefore management of our daily screen time is integral to wellbeing in the digital era.
Design: A recent randomised controlled trial (NCT06353451) randomised university students (N = 111) to either reduce their daily phone use (intervention) or continue use as normal (control).