• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to secondary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

  • Opinion
  • Health IT
    • Behavioral Health
    • Care Coordination
    • EMR/EHR
    • Interoperability
    • Patient Engagement
    • Population Health Management
    • Revenue Cycle Management
    • Social Determinants of Health
  • Digital Health
    • AI
    • Blockchain
    • Precision Medicine
    • Telehealth
    • Wearables
  • Life Sciences
  • Investments
  • M&A
  • Value-based Care
    • Accountable Care (ACOs)
    • Medicare Advantage

Wearable Fitness Trackers Adoption Trends (Infographic)

by Jasmine Pennic 10/03/2014 Leave a Comment

  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Email
  • Print

Wearable fitness trackers have created an unprecedented opportunity for the healthcare community to collect valuable data that could greatly impact patient care and health insurance premiums. Still, adoption rates for such devices remain low in the U.S. adult population.

While the use of health and fitness tracking devices has more than doubled in the last two years, a new nationwide survey conducted by TechnologyAdvice shows that only 25.1 percent of adults are currently using either a fitness tracker or a smartphone app to monitor their health, weight, or exercise.

The following infographic illustrates some of the study’s key takeaways:

Wearable Fitness Trackers Adoption Trends (Infographic)

Infographic Background

The survey was conducted through a random sample of more than 900 U.S. adults who were asked about their general fitness tracking habits, including 419 who were surveyed on their specific reasons for not using tracking devices or apps.

This data, which reflects the acceptance of similar self-monitoring incentives now being offered by auto insurance providers, suggests that health insurance providers are in a better position to encourage the adoption of health fitness tracking than healthcare providers. However, both would benefit greatly from increased use of fitness tracking devices. Physicians would gain access to accurate, patient-generated data that could improve preventative care strategies, monitor patient outcomes, and analyze overall trends in patient populations. Meanwhile, it would allow health insurance providers to create more accurate risk profiles on individuals while gathering valuable data on risk factors and potential expenditures.

More information on this survey’s results and methodology can be found here.

  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Email
  • Print

Tagged With: Healthcare Infographics

Tap Native

Get in-depth healthcare technology analysis and commentary delivered straight to your email weekly

Reader Interactions

Primary Sidebar

Subscribe to HIT Consultant

Latest insightful articles delivered straight to your inbox weekly.

Submit a Tip or Pitch

Featured Insights

Aligning IT & Clinical Teams: How to Reduce Friction and Improve Communication

Most-Read

OpenAI Launches ChatGPT for Clinicians: Free AI Documentation and Research Tool for Verified Physicians

OpenAI Launches ChatGPT for Clinicians: Free AI Documentation and Research Tool for Verified Physicians

IKS Health Acquires TruBridge for Rural EHR and RCM Solutions Expansion

IKS Health Acquires TruBridge for Rural EHR and RCM Solutions Expansion

UT Austin is Building the Nation's First 'AI-Native' Hospital, Backed by $750M

Why UT Austin is Building an ‘AI-Native’ Hospital from Scratch

The Medtech Pitch Deck Casino: Why Hype Still Wins, and How Scrutiny Could Improve Everyone’s Odds

The Casino Model: Why Medtech VCs Are Betting Billions on Unproven AI

Oracle Lays Off 539 Kansas City Employees as Focus Shifts to AI Data Centers

Oracle Lays Off 539 Kansas City Employees as Focus Shifts to AI Data Centers

SAMHSA and ONC Invest $20M in Behavioral Health IT Initiative

HHS Reverses 2024 Tech Reorganization: Why HHS Just Stripped AI and Cyber Operations Out of the ONC

How Small Medical Practices Can Build HIPAA-Aligned DevSecOps Without Enterprise Budgets

How Small Medical Practices Can Build HIPAA-Aligned DevSecOps Without Enterprise Budgets

Insilico Medicine and Eli Lilly Form $2.75B AI Drug Discovery Collaboration

Insilico Medicine and Eli Lilly Form $2.75B AI Drug Discovery Collaboration

Microsoft Copilot Health, Integrates Apple Health, Oura, and 50,000 EHRs in New AI Push

Microsoft Launches Copilot Health, Integrates Apple Health, Oura, and 50,000 EHRs in New AI Push

Health Recovery Solutions (HRS) Acquires Rimidi for Chronic Care Management and RPM Integration

Health Recovery Solutions (HRS) Acquires Rimidi for Chronic Care Management and RPM Integration

Secondary Sidebar

Footer

Company

  • About Us
  • 2026 Editorial Calendar
  • Advertise with Us
  • Reprints and Permissions
  • Op-Ed Submission Guidelines
  • Contact
  • Subscribe

Editorial Coverage

  • Opinion
  • Health IT
    • Care Coordination
    • EMR/EHR
    • Interoperability
    • Population Health Management
    • Revenue Cycle Management
  • Digital Health
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Blockchain Tech
    • Precision Medicine
    • Telehealth
    • Wearables
  • Startups
  • Value-Based Care
    • Accountable Care
    • Medicare Advantage

Connect

Subscribe to HIT Consultant Media

Latest insightful articles delivered straight to your inbox weekly

Copyright © 2026. HIT Consultant Media. All Rights Reserved. Privacy Policy |