Formally tracking health data changes health behavior and drives social

Formally tracking health data changes health behavior and drives social

Most of us keep track of some aspect of our health. Half of all people who track do so “in their heads,” not on paper, Excel spreadsheet, or via digital platform. Furthermore, 36% update their health tracking data at least once a day; but 16% update at most twice a month, and 9% update less than once monthly.Tracking for Health from the Pew Internet & American Life Project paints a portrait of U.S. adults who, on one hand are quantifying themselves but largely aren’t taking advantage of automated and convenient ways of doing so.Overall, 69% of U.S. adults track a health indicator. The most popular aspects of health to track are weight, diet and

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What the influencers are saying

  1. Kathy Mackey

    109.0 days ago

    MT @healthythinker Caveat on health tracking - "in your head" isn't nearly as impactful as paper or tech http://t.co/5BKxdJ0L #qs

  2. Susannah Fox

    109.0 days ago

    I love the images people are using for "Tracking for Health" posts: a scale, measuring tape & @healthythinker's graphic http://t.co/nDXkqeZA

  3. healthythinker

    109.0 days ago

    Formal #health tracking drives engagement & changed health behavior @healthpopuli via @susannahfox & Pew http://t.co/lmhXdjsZ #mheath #hcsm

  4. healthythinker

    109.0 days ago

    Caveat on self-#health tracking - "in your head" isn't nearly as impactful as paper or via digital tech http://t.co/lmhXdjsZ @susannahfox

  5. Matthew Holt

    109.0 days ago

    RT @healthythinker Caveat on health tracking - "in your head" isn't nearly as impactful as paper or via digital tech http://t.co/l5yZOi4L



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