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Dublin: 15 °C Saturday 25 May, 2013

Is your mobile phone the key to getting fit?

A former White House fitness expert is asking that very question, as he believes mobile fitness units could “change the face of health care”.

Image: NUI Galway

COULD YOUR MOBILE phone be the key to getting fit?

That is the question being posed by a Galway researcher and former White House fitness expert at an event in Boston today.

Ted Vickey is a PhD researcher at the Digital Enterprise Research Institute (DERI) at National University of Ireland Galway and was the executive director of the fitness center at the White House for 11 years under the Bush, Clinton and Bush Administrations.

Today, he is going to be speaking at the fifth annual Medicine 2.0 Congress in Harvard Medical School, Boston. There, he will tell delegates that “understanding one’s social network may be one key to better health”.

Explains Vickey:

Rather than surfing in the ocean, we are surfing the web. Rather than an outdoor game of tennis under the sun, we are inside our homes playing online virtual tennis on our Wii. People drive their cars to the gym and then take the escalator to the front door rather than walking and taking the stairs.

He posed the question: “But what if technology could be the solution to our problem?

What if our mobile phones could track our every step, provide healthy tips during the day, even persuade or motivate us when we need it most? This dream is now a reality all across the globe and it is called Mobile Health.

He noted that there are an estimated 13,000 health related apps in the iTunes, everything from monitoring blood pressure to tweeting body weight to tracking sleep cycles.

Motivation

As part of his PhD research, Vickey and his colleagues at NUI Galway collected over 4.5 million tweets sent via mobile fitness applications from around the world.

They then categorised these tweets into different classifications, in an attempt to understand correlations between online social networking and effective exercise motivation and adherence.

With studies indicating that lack of motivation is a key factor in why a person does not exercise, Vickey pointed out:

Mobile fitness apps not only allow for the sharing of information between user and health care providers, but also with a user’s friends.

After examining the information, he has determined that these self-monitoring units “will help change the face of health care around the globe”.

Vickey’s paper is called ‘Estimating the Long Term Effectiveness of Mobile Fitness Apps and Exercise Motivation’, and it has been shortlisted for the iMedicalApps-Medicine 2.0 mHealth Research Award.

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Comments (18 Comments)

  • Move more, eat less.

    Reply
  • Very interesting article. I think mobile apps play an important role in motivation. I use Runkeeper everyday to track what distance I am walking & then review it weekly to see where I can improve for the following week. I share my data on Twitter & engage in discussion with people about fitness, I find this very motivating.

    Reply
  • Nike plus.

    Reply
  • I think they really help. I use micoach. It’s a free app. The website has lots of fitness plans available depending on what you want to achieve. I use mine for keeping track of my runs. It’s great! I love knowing miles/speed etc. It makes running a bit less boring. Although I realise all the really serious runners wouldn’t dream of running with a phone or, god forbid, music!

    Reply
    • Yeah I was wondering myself why most runners dont wear any music player. Is there reason for it? Safety? I am not running much, but couldn’t do without some music if I do what a boredom.

      Reply
    • Niall 14/09/12 #

      It’s not for safety, you can still hear trafic perfectly with music. Most serious runners are running for years before iPod nanos etc came out and are creatures of habit and routine. Going for a long run is an escape from everything, including technology.

      Reply
    • I think music players isolate people. When I am running I want to engage with the world, hear the birdies say hello to the old lady walking her dog etc.

      It’s the same as people walking through town centres with their headphones on. They are never really ‘there’ they are in their own little bubble.

      Reply
  • sara 14/09/12 #

    The key to getting fit is getting up off your arse! You don’t need a phone to tell you that but by all means use it if it helps..

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    • Sure Sara, but if you don’t get up off your arse enough, and the phone can make you get up more – this is a pretty good idea to spend 50 Euro on the app and become more healthy, right? Not everyone is as self motivated as you :)

      Reply
  • I think Ted has hit the nail on the head. I got into running after seeing my friends Nike+ and Runkeeper updates constantly on twitter and Facebook.

    Peer pressure can be a great motivator for not missing a training session or race. The instant feedback regarding personal bests, distance and speed are also great for keeping motivated

    Reply
  • Didn’t realise this was Adverts.ie mate.

    Reply
  • My mistake, didn’t realise I was actually reading Adverts.ie…

    Reply
  • Meh 14/09/12 #

    “With studies indicating that lack of motivation is a key factor in why a person does not exercise, Vickey pointed out”

    or “Couldn’t be arsed” .

    So this is a PHD??, spend time on social networks reading tweets, say mobile apps are cool, report the most completely obvious outcomes.

    Reply
    • Do you really think that 3 or 4 years of research can be closed in such short article? :D

      I don’t get why people like you dare to negatively comment someone else’s hard work after reading one short article. That’s an ignorance! Even from reading this article, if you read it closely you’d've found out that his paper was shortlisted for a research award. Do you really think that you get the award for as you said “spend time on social networks reading tweets, say mobile apps are cool, report the most completely obvious outcomes”?

      I don’t want to start a fight here, but I’d suggest to (at least) analyze what you read before making such comments.

      Reply
  • Such crap – yet another PhD in a total non-subject – no doubt funded by taxpayer money. The way to get fit is get off your fecking arse and move. Stop blaming the weather, the web, tv, society and just put one shagging foot in front of the other. It ain’t rocket science people – despite what legions of pointless PhD theses will tell you.

    Reply
    • What a stupid comment. Research is extremely valuable & especially in the area of fitness due to the rate of obesity in Ireland. If apps/websites helps with is situation then we should embrace it. The fact is social sports gamification is on the increase and I for one believes it is a huge motivation factor.

      This type of research could place more emphasis on fitness app development & could change peoples attitude towards fitness by making it fun.

      Reply
    • Eat less. Move more.

      That’ll be €100,000 in research grants please.

      Reply
    • Says the guys with Eric Cartman as the profiler… Nice touch.

      I use Sports Tracker on my phone and find it really motivational. Used to take up exercising for a week or so but now I can track my progress it motivates me to keep going!!

      Reply

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