Real-world impact of physical activity reward-driven digital app use on cardiometabolic and cardiovascular disease incidence.

IF 5.4 Q1 MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL Communications medicine Pub Date : 2025-03-27 DOI:10.1038/s43856-025-00792-z
Adi Berliner Senderey, Tom Mushkat, Ofer Hadass, Daphna Carmeli, Samah Hayek, Marie-Laura Charpingnon, Eyal Jacobson, Ran D Balicer
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Abstract

Background: The lack of effective tools available to health providers for enhancing patient physical activity prompts this study to examine the real-world impact of a physical activity reward-driven app on health outcomes, utilizing Electronic Health Records (EHR) data from Israel's largest healthcare organization.

Methods: Conducting a retrospective cohort study, we matched app-users to non-users based on demographic and clinical characteristics.

Results: App-users have a significantly lower risk of cardiovascular disease (HR 0.95), stroke (HR 0.91), and type 2 diabetes (HR 0.82) compared to non-app users. Higher levels of physical activity among app users further reduce the incidence of cardiovascular disease (HR 0.87), stroke (HR 0.84), and type 2 diabetes (HR 0.75) compared with non-app user. However, engagement in mild physical activity, as measured by step count, does not differ from non- users in the incidence of these conditions.

Conclusions: These findings highlight the potential of app-based interventions to promote higher levels of physical activity and mitigate major vascular and metabolic illnesses.

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体育活动奖励驱动的数字应用程序使用对心脏代谢和心血管疾病发病率的实际影响。
背景:医疗服务提供者缺乏有效的工具来增强患者的身体活动,这促使本研究利用以色列最大的医疗机构的电子健康记录(EHR)数据,研究身体活动奖励驱动的应用程序对健康结果的现实影响。方法:进行回顾性队列研究,我们根据人口统计学和临床特征将应用程序用户与非用户进行匹配。结果:与非应用程序用户相比,应用程序用户患心血管疾病(HR 0.95)、中风(HR 0.91)和2型糖尿病(HR 0.82)的风险显著降低。与非应用程序用户相比,应用程序用户较高的身体活动水平进一步降低了心血管疾病(HR 0.87)、中风(HR 0.84)和2型糖尿病(HR 0.75)的发病率。然而,以步数衡量,参与轻度体育活动与非使用者在这些疾病的发生率上没有区别。结论:这些发现强调了基于app的干预措施在促进更高水平的身体活动和减轻主要血管和代谢疾病方面的潜力。
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