| Literature DB >> 34104344 |
Abstract
Sleep app ownership is increasing exponentially, due to their accessibility and ease-of-use. However, there are several concerns regarding the use of sleep apps. Few sleep apps demonstrate empirical evidence to support their claims, and if they do, this evidence can be based on significant methodological limitations. In addition, there are data privacy concerns with regards to sleep apps, which share sensitive user data with business and marketing partners, unbeknownst to their users. Moreover, sleep apps may increase engagement with healthcare professionals, which may place additional strain on under-pressure sleep services. This would be compounded by the fact that some sleep apps produce many false positives, and clinicians would need more time to analyze the data provided by these apps. In the future, sleep apps must undergo rigorous validation studies and grant more autonomy to their users over how their data is shared.Entities:
Keywords: Mobile Applications; Polysomnography; Sleep; Smartphone; Validation Study
Year: 2021 PMID: 34104344 PMCID: PMC8157780 DOI: 10.5935/1984-0063.20200036
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sleep Sci ISSN: 1984-0063
Results of validations studies of sleep apps which claim to detect sleep parameters. All comparisons are made with polysomnography[8-10].
| Sleep App | Study Population | Exclusion Criteria | Study Findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sleep Cycle[ | - n=25 (22 suspected | - Complex genetic or craniofacial disorders. | - No correlation with polysomnography in the measurement of total sleep time (CCC 0.22, |
| MotionX 24/7[ | - n=78 (all suspected OSA); | - Conditions affecting motor control or limb movement. | - Over-estimated total sleep time by 106 minutes ( |
| Sleep Time[ | - n=20 (all healthy volunteers); | - Diagnosed sleep disorder. | - No correlation with polysomnography in the measurement of sleep efficiency ( |
Age expressed as mean ± standard deviation; OSA: Obstructive sleep apnoea; CCC: Concordance correlation co-efficient.