AI Article Synopsis

  • Wearable activity trackers (WAT) have the potential to improve health among older adults, but their use during COVID-19 is not well understood.
  • In a study of 3,302 older Americans, only about 10% reported frequent use of WATs both before and during the pandemic.
  • Findings revealed that older adults over 75 and those with low incomes were less likely to frequently use WATs, highlighting socioeconomic and age disparities in adoption.

Article Abstract

Wearable activity trackers (WAT) have shown high potential to improve health in the aging population. Evidence links various social factors with WAT use in older adults, but mainly within small samples and the prevalence of their WAT use during the COVID-19 is unknown. We reported WAT use prevalence before and during the first wave of COVID-19 and examined social factors associated with WAT use frequency using a nationally representative sample of 3302 U.S. older adults. We used Multinomial Logistic Regression to identify social factors associated with WAT use frequency. Only 10.3% of pre-COVID-19 and 10.9% of first-wave subsamples were frequent WAT users. Older adults aged 75 and above and those with low incomes were less likely to frequently use WATs. Our findings suggest socioeconomic and age disparities in WAT use among older Americans. Future studies should focus on enhancing low-income older adults' WAT adoption to enable equal access to WAT-related health benefits.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/07334648231205417DOI Listing

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