Healthy holidays: Wearables and health data may tip the scales toward better nutrition has been saved
United States
United States
India
Many people start the new year resolving to undo the excesses of the holiday season and adopt healthy eating habits going forward. Technology can help. Many consumers with smartwatches use them to track exercise, count calories, and monitor their health in real time. Recent Deloitte research shows that many consumers surveyed are willing to share smartwatch data with grocers in exchange for personalized nutrition and food recommendations.
Deloitte’s 2022 Connectivity and Mobile Trends study1 revealed that many US consumers are taking charge of their well-being by using wearables. The study found that about six in 10 consumer households own a wearable device—either a smartwatch or fitness tracker—and the vast majority (87%) of surveyed wearable owners use them to track health metrics like heart rate, workout duration, and sleep quality. Nearly four in 10 (39%) report using their devices to monitor calories and nutrition, and almost half (47%) say they share the health data gathered by their wearables with their health care providers. Notably, at least seven in 10 wearable owners say their fitness and health have improved with the help of these devices and apps.
Today’s health apps integrate exercise plans, nutrition recommendations, and meal planning to drive goals like weight loss.2 But there is a potential to go even further. Deloitte’s Future of Fresh study3 examines the trend of food as medicine—a concept that recognizes the preventative and therapeutic benefits gained through personalized, healthy diets based on scientifically validated claims. The survey found that roughly half (48%) of surveyed consumers would use an app or website for personalized food recommendations, and 42% are willing to share health data with their grocer for personally tailored food recommendations.
Better eating through sharing health data with trusted grocers could make a big difference. A bad diet's role—in cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, and even some forms of cancer—contributes to one in every five deaths globally.4 More than 48 million US households have a member with a health condition that needs to be managed through diet.5 Using food as medicine may improve outcomes and reduce traditional health care usage and costs.6
Consumer technology could have a significant role to play in advancing this movement toward better personal health/nutrition and even community-level care. Some wearables are advanced enough to monitor health markers and even changes in metabolism in real time.7 Grocery websites and nutrition apps can enable shoppers to learn about the nutritional benefits of different foods, identify smarter alternatives to unhealthy items, and see recommendations based on health conditions or dietary needs.8 What’s needed is a way to integrate these silos of data and make them digestible and actionable at each point in the care, health, and wellness journey. To generate individualized recommendations that map to desired outcomes, wearable data should interoperate with the information systems used by clinicians and dietitians.9
Fitbit, “How do I track my food with the Fitbit app?,” accessed November 2022.
View in ArticleJustin Cook et al., Fresh food as medicine for the heartburn of high prices, Deloitte Insights, September 26, 2022.
View in ArticleJeff Loucks et al., Wearable technology in health care: Getting better all the time, Deloitte Insights, December 1, 2021.
View in ArticleDeloitte Insights, 2022 Deloitte holiday survey, accessed November 30, 2022.
View in ArticleJana Arbanas et al., Mastering the new digital life: 2022 Connectivity and Mobile Trends, 3rd edition, Deloitte Insights, August 2022.
View in ArticleCook et al., Fresh food as medicine for the heartburn of high prices.
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