New Apple Health Study to Research Role of Tech in Improving Health

Originally published at: New Apple Health Study to Research Role of Tech in Improving Health - TidBITS

In its Newsroom, Apple writes:

Today, Apple is launching the Apple Health Study, which aims to further understand how technology — including iPhone, Apple Watch, and AirPods — can play a role in advancing and improving physical health, mental health, and overall wellbeing. Available in the Research app, the study will also explore relationships between various areas of health, such as mental health’s impact on heart rate, or how sleep can influence exercise. The study is being conducted in collaboration with Brigham and Women’s Hospital, a leading research hospital and a major teaching affiliate of Harvard Medical School.

Overall, Apple’s health studies are a triple win:

  • Researchers gain access to far more data than they could otherwise obtain, thanks to Apple’s massive installed base and the pervasiveness of its devices in our daily lives.
  • Apple leverages the insights from these studies to add health-related features—such as the Vitals app on the Apple Watch and the Walking Steadiness feature on the iPhone—that make Apple products more appealing to health-conscious consumers.
  • We users benefit from future Apple tools, the overall increase in health-related knowledge, and the general satisfaction of contributing to society.

This new Apple Health Study is far broader than others Apple has conducted on women’s health, hearing, and heart health. It spans numerous health and disease areas (some seemingly duplicates of earlier studies), including activity, aging, cardiovascular health, circulatory health, cognition, hearing, menstrual health, mental health, metabolic health, mobility, neurologic health, respiratory health, sleep, and more.

Apple Health Study enrollment

The researchers aim to enroll at least 500,000 participants and conduct the study for at least 5 years. The study will collect a vast amount of data—that’s the whole point—but in this era of surreptitious surveillance from nearly every random app, it’s reassuring to be informed upfront precisely what data will be collected and why. While some data is mandatory, you can opt out of most requests that feel too sensitive.

In light of the recent attacks on federal funding for medical and scientific research, it’s noteworthy that this study is funded solely by Apple. While it’s encouraging to see some of Apple’s massive profits supporting medical research, studies like this aren’t a viable substitute for government-sponsored research that’s less encumbered by corporate, financial, or ideological agendas.

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Signed up. When I got to the final submission and tapped Next the progress circle whirled for a few minutes then it said it couldn’t enroll me now and to try again later. I waited a minute, clicked Next again and that time it worked. I assume it’s just server load spiking being it was just announced.

I’d suggest reading the agreements you have to sign, even though they’re long. I think they did a good job of laying out what’s shared, and what options I have.

Now I have 6 tasks to do. :man_facepalming: :laughing:

It’s not showing up for me. I’ll keep checking over the next few days. Maybe there’s some kind of limits on participation?

Make sure you’ve updated to version 6.0 of Apple’s Research app. That’s hidden deep in the fine print.

Should have mentioned I’m still on iOS 17.7.2, so it works at least that far back.

That was it. Signing up now. Thanks!

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Bold move by Apple. There is already modest to convincing evidence that tech negatively impacts the health of youth. This study is generally limited to people over 18, but maybe, for adults, tech will turn out to be more like exercise and reading than alcohol and tobacco.

Yeah the wording from the press release
“… including iPhone, Apple Watch, and AirPods — can play a role in advancing and improving physical health, mental health, and overall wellbeing.”
seems to suggests a preclusion of the possibility of a negative impact which would certainly be possible in the mental health area at least.

Hopefully that’s just Apple Newsroom editorial spin as it’s one hell of a big study to go into with pre-ordained ideas.

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