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posted by n1 on Wednesday December 02 2015, @01:07PM   Printer-friendly
from the data-addiction dept.

A number of doctors aren't so sure about the benefits of wearables eithers. A recent MIT Technology Review story found doctors from a number of specialities unsure about what to do with the data many of their fitness-tracking patients are bringing them."Clinicians can't do a lot with the number of steps you've taken in a day," Neil Sehgal, a senior research scientist at UCSF Center for Digital Health Innovation said. Andrew Trister, an oncologist and researcher at Sage Bionetworks echoed this sentiment. "[Patients] come in with these very large Excel spreadsheets, with all this information," he said. "I have no idea what to do with that."

One of the short-term problems for trackers is that their [sic] not actually reliable enough to be medically useful. The sorts of measurements that devices cheap enough to be commercial products tend only to focus on vague metrics that could just as easily be inferred from a short interview or basic examination. While certain health trackers have shown promise—such as the small implants that manage insulin for diabetics—they can also produce a hyper-vigilance and paranoia, leading to a degenerative process of over-managing issues that a person's body is already handling.

Are there Soylentils that do use fitness trackers regularly? Do they help you manage your health?


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  • (Score: 1) by purpleland on Wednesday December 02 2015, @07:01PM

    by purpleland (5193) on Wednesday December 02 2015, @07:01PM (#270844)

    If you are interested in taking care of yourself, get an annual physical from an internist every year, and scan/keep a record of your blood test results. Even better to slap it into a spreadsheet so you can look at trends. If you see your bad cholesterol go up a little every year, perhaps you should rethink your diet and not wait till it is flagged as unhealthy. Slowly learn about all the different tests and what they mean. Also keep in mind different labs have different criteria about what is good or bad, so it helps to pay some attention to anything borderline.

    And if you jog/run for exercise you might want to find another activity that won't result in knee and feet problems when you reach your forties.