Starting with health technology that can be worn as accessories, devices can be used to check heart rates, sleep, exercise, and other forms of biometrics. These devices also provide feedback while users make choices to improve their lifestyles. Furthermore, since wearable devices have become advanced with predictive analytics and personalized user recommendations, wearable health technology has changed the way health care is delivered from a reactive to proactive way of the overall healthcare of the individual being monitored.
Wearable devices can monitor and collect health data. They can collect data on the following:
- Your heart rate
- The amount of steps you take each day
- Your sleep hours and cycles, etc.
- Feedback on overall health (what you’re doing right and wrong)
Changing Behavior
Data from tracking your behavior can create a sense of responsibility that can influence a subsequent change framed in a behavior-modification strategy (i.e., targeting reinforcement and self-monitoring) to set and accomplish health-related goals.
- Achieve physical activity goals
- Increase health-related knowledge (e.g., knowledge of calories consumed)
- Self-monitoring (attainable goals)
- Obtain systematized constructive criticism on the particular aspects that require improvement in behavioral patterns and the need for sustained consistency
Prompt Identification of Anomalies Pertaining to One’s Wellness
Certain wearable devices provide notifications of atypical patterns related to one’s heart and sleep.
Preemptive reminders that arrive prior to a consultation with a health practitioner may assist in averting the exacerbation of medical problems of a more serious nature.
Association with Virtual Health Ecosystems
The majority of such devices facilitate the automatic transfer of the metrics that they have measured to a range of mobile software and/or to the health records of the users’ doctors.
This approach to data transmission helps to enhance the collaboration between a patient and a healthcare provider.
This data integration approach assists in the continuum of care.
Final Thoughts
Wearable technology in healthcare modifies individual perceptions of their health by means of immediate and constant surveillance, elevating real-time behavioral accountability, enhancing proactive and early identification of health anomalies, and amalgamating user-generated information with contemporary healthcare technologies.
Harnessing data empowers users regarding the ownership of their health outcomes, the ability to make informed health decisions, and the data reinforces the need to do so.
Health monitoring technologies have the capability to provide enduring health issue mitigation through increased user awareness.


