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Feasibility of Long-Term Physical Activity Measurement With a Wearable Activity Tracker in Patients With Axial Spondyloarthritis: 1-Year Longitudinal Observational Study

Feasibility of Long-Term Physical Activity Measurement With a Wearable Activity Tracker in Patients With Axial Spondyloarthritis: 1-Year Longitudinal Observational Study

The passive collection of data using wearables has been highlighted as a goal within remote monitoring in rheumatology, as it may ease the monitoring of disease activity besides using electronic patient-reported outcomes [13,14]. In addition, continuous measurement with an activity tracker has the potential to provide further insight into how the physical activity levels of patients with ax Sp A are affected by their disease [15-17].

Emil Eirik Kvernberg Thomassen, Anne Therese Tveter, Inger Jorid Berg, Eirik Klami Kristianslund, Andrew Reiner, Sarah Hakim, Laure Gossec, Gary J Macfarlane, Annette de Thurah, Nina Østerås

JMIR Hum Factors 2025;12:e68645

Feasibility of Using Resting Heart Rate and Step Counts From Patient-Held Sensors During Clinical Assessment of Medical Emergencies (FUSE): Protocol for Prospective Observational Study in European Hospitals

Feasibility of Using Resting Heart Rate and Step Counts From Patient-Held Sensors During Clinical Assessment of Medical Emergencies (FUSE): Protocol for Prospective Observational Study in European Hospitals

Secondary objectives To explore the proportion of patients assessed for an acute complaint who are wearing or carrying a device that collects data on vital signs (eg, smartwatch or other wearables). To describe the population who wear or carry devices that collect data on vital signs. To quantify the change in heart rate in patients admitted to acute care between measurements taken on presentation and previously recorded vital signs by a consumer-grade wearable while patients were stable and well.

Jack Barrington, Christian Subbe, John Kellett, Erika Frischknecht Christensen, Mikkel Brabrand, Prabath Nanayakkara, Jelmer Alsma

JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e55975

Sex Differences in the Variability of Physical Activity Measurements Across Multiple Timescales Recorded by a Wearable Device: Observational Retrospective Cohort Study

Sex Differences in the Variability of Physical Activity Measurements Across Multiple Timescales Recorded by a Wearable Device: Observational Retrospective Cohort Study

Data from wearables provide unique opportunities to explore physiological and behavioral variability between sexes both across populations and within individual time series data [21]. In our previous work, we used continuous longitudinal distal skin temperature data generated by Oura Ring users in situ to test the hypothesis that female individuals are statistically more physiologically variable than male individuals [15].

Kristin J Varner, Lauryn Keeler Bruce, Severine Soltani, Wendy Hartogensis, Stephan Dilchert, Frederick M Hecht, Anoushka Chowdhary, Leena Pandya, Subhasis Dasgupta, Ilkay Altintas, Amarnath Gupta, Ashley E Mason, Benjamin L Smarr

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e66231

Health Care 2025: How Consumer-Facing Devices Change Health Management and Delivery

Health Care 2025: How Consumer-Facing Devices Change Health Management and Delivery

Interconnectivity of wearables and devices with the environment, health care systems, and individuals. EMR: electronic medical record. The USC Center for Body Computing, for example, has developed a digital research software platform that is capable of continuous assessment of self-reported psychological state and can dynamically measure cognitive status [2].

Simon Trinh, Devin Skoll, Leslie Ann Saxon

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e60766

Mobile Apps and Wearable Devices for Cardiovascular Health: Narrative Review

Mobile Apps and Wearable Devices for Cardiovascular Health: Narrative Review

The screening for wearables took place via Google search aimed at identifying the most relevant heart health wearables available both in the DACH region and globally. The keywords “heart wearables,” “heart device tracking,” “health wearables,” “healthcare wearable devices,” “smart wearables,” “fitness wearables,” “heart health tracking,” “medical trackers,” “DACH herzmonitor,” and “Herzmonitor” were used.

Gauri Kumari Chauhan, Patrick Vavken, Christine Jacob

JMIR Mhealth Uhealth 2025;13:e65782

Modernizing the Staging of Parkinson Disease Using Digital Health Technology

Modernizing the Staging of Parkinson Disease Using Digital Health Technology

Digital devices, including smartphones, tablets, and wearables, provide the capability to obtain accurate, objective measures and PROs for neurocognitive monitoring; allow for a much more fine-grained approach to longitudinal monitoring across all functional areas of neurocognition; and lead to the enhancement of personalized rehabilitative efforts, ultimately yielding higher patient quality of life.

John Michael Templeton, Christian Poellabauer, Sandra Schneider, Morteza Rahimi, Taofeek Braimoh, Fhaheem Tadamarry, Jason Margolesky, Shanna Burke, Zeina Al Masry

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e63105