Assessing Wearable mHealth Adherence in Underserved Adolescents and its Associations With Physical Activity, Sports, and Safety Perceptions: Prospective Cohort Study
Annabel Nunez-Gaunaurd, Michele Raya

TL;DR
This study explores how wearable fitness trackers can help underserved adolescents increase physical activity, finding that perceived neighborhood safety and lower baseline activity predict better adherence.
Contribution
The study identifies predictors of adherence to wearable mHealth devices in underserved adolescents, offering insights for improving school-based physical activity interventions.
Findings
73% of participants adhered to using the wearable device for ≥21 valid days.
Adherent students reported lower physical activity frequency and higher perceived neighborhood safety.
Neighborhood walkability and team sports participation significantly predicted device adherence.
Abstract
Adolescents from underserved communities, particularly Black and Hispanic youth, engage in lower levels of physical activity (PA), increasing their risk for chronic disease. Conventional interventions often face barriers such as limited access to safe environments. Wearable mobile health technologies offer scalable and context-sensitive solutions; however, predictors of sustained adherence in school-based settings among high-risk populations remain underexplored. This study aims to examine the behavioral and contextual predictors of adherence to a consumer-grade wearable PA tracker among underserved high school students. In this school-based observational study, 63 students (mean age 14.8, SD 1.17 years) enrolled in physical education received Fitbit devices. Adherence was defined as ≥21 valid days of step count data. Measures included self-reported PA behaviors, neighborhood…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMobile Health and mHealth Applications · Physical Activity and Health · Children's Physical and Motor Development
