| Literature DB >> 27881359 |
Nicola D Ridgers1, Melitta A McNarry2, Kelly A Mackintosh2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The proliferation and popularity of wearable activity trackers (eg, Fitbit, Jawbone, Misfit) may present an opportunity to integrate such technology into physical activity interventions. While several systematic reviews have reported intervention effects of using wearable activity trackers on adults' physical activity levels, none to date have focused specifically on children and adolescents.Entities:
Keywords: behaviour change; electronic activity monitor; mHealth; physical activity
Year: 2016 PMID: 27881359 PMCID: PMC5143467 DOI: 10.2196/mhealth.6540
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Mhealth Uhealth ISSN: 2291-5222 Impact factor: 4.773
Figure 1Flow diagram of screening process and results.
Summary of included studies on the effectiveness and feasibility of wearable activity trackers in youth (chronological order by study design).
| Study | Country | Participants | Type of study | Study design and description | Device examined | Outcomes assessed |
| Slootmaker, 2010 [ | Netherlands | Adolescents (13-17 years old), 32 boys, 55 girls (15.1 years) at baseline | Intervention plus feasibility component | Least active group of youth recruited. Randomized to intervention or control. 3-month Web-based intervention combining self-monitoring, goal setting, device and PAM COACH. | PAM and PAM COACH | Physical activity: Activity Questionnaire for Adolescents and Adults (self-report). Time spent in SEDa, LPAb, MPAc, and VPAd. Process measures: evaluation of PAM and PAM coach. |
| Hayes, 2015 [ | USA | 6 grade-3 girls (aged 8 years old) from 1 school; intact social group | Intervention | Recess intervention (22 sessions in total). Fitbit used to self-monitor physical activity levels against set goals. Tangible rewards provided if goals met. | Fitbit (model not reported) | Steps/recess. MVPAe (min) during recess. |
| Hooke, 2016 [ | USA | 16 children (5 boys, 11 girls) aged mean 8.7, SD 3.1 years; participants receiving a cycle of maintenance chemotherapy for lymphoblastic leukemia | Intervention plus feasibility component | Used for 17 days before and 5 days after a corticosteroid pulse. Step goal tailored based on data and daily feedback against goal provided (either to increase or maintain physical activity). Goal set in Fitbit website by study nurse for participants to track progress. | Fitbit One | Steps/day. Feasibility component included ease of recruitment, ease of use and enjoyment of Fitbit, and days of wear. |
| Schaefer, 2014 [ | USA | 24 children (11 boys, 13 girls) aged 7-10 years (mean 8.9, SD 1.3 years) | Feasibility | Each child wore a different monitor for 1 week (4 weeks total). Underwent structured interview about each device and then summary (exit) interview at the end, with child and parents interviewed separately. | Actical | Frequency of removal, reasons for removal, enjoyment, comfort of use, favorite/least favorite device characteristics. Devices also ranked in terms of most and least favorite. |
| Schaefer, 2016 [ | USA | 34 children (22 boys, 12 girls) 11-12 years old (mean age 12.6 years); attending a low-socioeconomic-status school | Feasibility | 6-month feasibility study. Initially asked to wear devices during after-school program, which then increased to daily wear. | Fitbit One | Fitbit data (ie, steps). Interviews examining experiences of using the Fitbit. |
aSED: sedentary time.
bLPA: light-intensity physical activity.
cMPA: moderate-intensity physical activity.
dVPA: vigorous-intensity physical activity.
eMVPA: moderate- to vigorous-intensity physical activity.
Figure 2Wearable devices used in the included studies: (a) Fitbit One, (b) the PAM (new model shown), (c) SenseWear, (d) Actical, (e) Polar Active, and (f) Polar heart rate monitor.
Overview of features of wearable devices used in the included studies on the effectiveness and feasibility of wearable activity trackers in youth.
| Device | Location worn | Main measures | Device display | Compatibility | Sensors | Memory | Waterproof |
| Fitbit One | Waist | Steps, stairs, distance, calories, sleep | Yes | Personal computer, iOS, Android, Windows | Accelerometer (3 axis), altimeter | Up to 23 days | No |
| PAM | Waist | Physical activity score | Yes | Personal computer | Accelerometer (3 axis) | Not reported | No |
| SenseWear | Upper arm | Physical activity, energy expenditure, steps, sleep | No (optional display required) | Personal computer | Accelerometer (3 axis), heat flux, galvanic skin response, skin temperature, near-body ambient temperature | Up to 34 days | No |
| Actical | Wrist, waist, ankle | Physical activity, energy expenditure, steps | No | Personal computer | Accelerometer (omnidirectional) | Up to 194 days | Yes |
| Polar Active | Wrist | Physical activity, steps, calories, sleep | Yes | Personal computer, iOS, Android | Accelerometer (3 axis) | 21 days (activity diary) | Yes |
| Polar heart rate monitor | Chest | Heart rate, calories | No | Personal computer | Heart rate | Up to 30 hours | Yes |
Risk-of-bias resultsa in studies on the effectiveness and feasibility of wearable activity trackers in youth.
| Study | Random allocation | Minimal missing data | Analyzed in group allocated | Representative sampling | Timing of outcome assessments | Reliability of device | Validity of device | Independence from device manufacturer |
| Hayes, 2015 [ | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Hooke, 2016 [ | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Schaefer, 2014 [ | N/Ab | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Schaefer, 2016 [ | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Slootmaker, 2010 [ | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
aScored as follows: 1 = yes; 0 = no.
bN/A: not applicable.