The Journal of mHealth Vol 1 Issue 3 (June 2014) | Page 14
Industry News
New US Study Shows
70% of People Tracking
Their Health and Fitness
Daily Using Apps
A new study released by mobile engagement
provider Mobiquity, Inc has found that while
70 percent of people use mobile apps on a
daily basis to track calorie intake and monitor
physical activities, only 40 percent share data
and insights with their doctors. Working with
an independent research firm, Mobiquity’s
“Get Mobile, Get Healthy: The Appification of Health & Fitness” study reveals the
opportunity for healthcare professionals and
organisations to leverage mobile solutions to
drive positive behaviour change and healthier patient outcomes. In fact, 34 percent of
mobile health and fitness app users said they
would increase their use of apps if their doctors actively recommended it.
(69 percent), mobile shopping (68 percent),
listening to music (60 percent) and making/
receiving phone calls (30 percent).
Mobile drives healthier lifestyles
“Our study shows there’s a huge opportunity for medical professionals, pharmaceutical companies and health organisations to
use mobile to drive positive behavior change
and, as a result, better patient outcomes,” said
Scott Snyder, president and chief strategy
officer at Mobiquity. “The gap will be closed
by those who design mobile health solutions
that are indispensable and laser-focused on
users’ goals, and that carefully balance data
collection with user control and privacy.”
According to the research, 73 percent of
people claim to be healthier by using a smartphone and apps to track their health and fitness. Fifty three percent, in fact, discovered
they were eating more calories than they
realised. Sixty-three percent intend to continue, and even increase, their mobile health
tracking in the next five years. But it doesn’t
stop there: 55 percent of today’s mobile
health app users also plan to introduce wearable devices like pedometers, wristbands and
smartwatches to their health monitoring in
coming years.
Smartphone health tracking
beats social networking
For many, using a smartphone to track their
health and fitness is more important to them
than using their phone for social networking
But there is room for
improvement
What’s stopping people from using their
health and fitness apps more? Doctor recommendations would be a big motivator,
said 34 percent. Privacy was also a concern
for 61 percent. But the chief reason people
quit using these apps is simply because they
forget – something that could and should be
addressed by app developers to ensure health
apps are less disposable.
Mobiquity
commissioned
independent
research firm Research Now to survey 1,000
consumers who use, or plan to use, health
and fitness mobile apps. The study was conducted between March 5-11, 2014.
Summary of results
A summary of the results from this survey can
be seen in the accompanying infograph. n
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12
June 2014
The
Journal of mHealth
The Global Voice of mHealth