Ensuring healthy aging is becoming a social and economic priority and one of the few options to save national health services currently under huge pressions. We believe that wearable devices can represent an effective tool to improve health and healthcare in older adults. Despite requiring more frequent monitoring due to rising frailty and comorbidities, older adults often face barriers to accessing healthcare and may present to emergency services with advanced conditions requiring urgent treatment. Wearables can help detect early signs of deterioration, enabling timely interventions, improving health outcomes, and reducing costs and congestion for the NHS.
Modern advancement in mobile health technologies has the potential to bring medical assessments to everyone’s home and to make healthcare more accurate and accessible.
We have conducted of the most comprehensive and advanced investigations of aging using wearable technology ever undertaken in a deeply phenotyped British cohort.
Our main aim is to determine how to harness novel wearable devices to improve health in older adults, and the main objectives are:
1) To establish determinants of physical activity and exercise capacity in older adults.
2) To develop a computational model based on wearable data to predict hospitalizations, adverse events and cognitive decline in older adults.
3) To determine the dynamic interplay between cardiorespiratory function, physical activity, mental health and cognitive function in older adults.
Because of the duration and multi-domain nature of the wearable assessment and the breadth and depth of biomedical, cognitive and social characterization in this cohort, we believe that this project represents a unique opportunity to better understanding aging and to harness new technologies to improve healthy aging and transform healthcare.

