Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World

The Diagnosis Difference

Part Three: Tracking for Health

People with chronic conditions are highly likely to track their symptoms

Clinical research shows that tracking symptoms and other indicators is a low-cost, effective health intervention.10 This is the first national survey measuring the extent of tracking among the people most likely to benefit—those living with chronic health conditions.

Seven in ten U.S. adults living with one chronic condition and fully 80% of people living with two or more conditions track a health indicator, for themselves or for someone else. By comparison, 61% of adults living with no conditions track some aspect of health. When controlling for age, income, education, ethnicity, and overall health status, living with chronic conditions increases the probability that someone will track a health indicator.

Tracking health indicators

Education and age also play a role. Being college-educated increases someone’s likelihood to track their weight, diet, or exercise routine. College-educated adults, however, are less likely to track other health indicators like blood pressure, blood sugar, sleep patterns, or headaches, possibly because they are less likely to be living with a chronic disease or other health condition. Being younger (between the ages of 18 and 39) is also independently associated with a lower likelihood to track other health indicators.

Health trackers living with chronic conditions are likely to say they use formal means, such as paper and pencil or a medical device, to take note of changes:

  • 41% of health trackers who report having one or more chronic conditions use pencil and paper.
  • 14% of this group uses a medical device such as a glucometer.
  • 4% of this group uses an app or other tool on their mobile device or phone.
  • 4% of this group uses a computer program, like a spreadsheet.
  • 1% of this group uses a website.

However, informal means are also popular: 43% of health trackers living with one or more chronic conditions say they just keep track in their heads.

Previous research shows that people who use more formal tracking methods are more likely to do so on a regular basis and more likely to say it has had an impact on their health.11

Indeed, 50% of trackers living with one or more conditions say they track on a regular basis, compared with 43% of trackers who report no conditions (a statistically significant difference). The gap widens among those with multiple conditions and when looking at the most frequent interval we asked about: 28% of trackers living with two or more conditions say they do so daily, compared with 11% of those with no conditions.

Forty-five percent of trackers living with one or more conditions say they keep track of health indicators only when something comes up or changes. By comparison, 54% of trackers who report no conditions say they keep track episodically.

Trackers living with chronic conditions are also more likely than others to say they share their notes with other people:

  • 39% of trackers living with one or more condition share their notes, compared with 30% of those who report no conditions.
  • Of that group, two-thirds living with chronic conditions share tracking notes with a health or medical professional: 64% do so, compared with 37% of those who report no conditions.

Seventy-two percent of trackers living with one or more conditions say tracking has had an impact on their health or the health of someone they care for, compared with 55% of trackers who report no conditions.

Half of trackers living with chronic conditions (51%) say that tracking has changed their overall approach to their own or someone else’s health. Forty-eight percent of trackers living with chronic conditions say it has led them to ask a doctor new questions or to get a second opinion. Forty-three percent of trackers living with chronic conditions say it has affected a health care decision. Comparisons with those who report no chronic conditions are displayed in the table below:

Impact of tracking health
  1. See, for example: “Premonitory symptoms in migraine: An electronic diary study,” by N.J. Giffin, et al. Neurology March 25, 2003 vol. 60 no. 6 935-940. Available at: http://www.neurology.org/content/60/6/935.abstract; “Type 1 diabetes: Treatments and drugs,” Mayo Clinic. Available at: http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/type-1-diabetes/DS00329/DSECTION=treatments-and-drugs; or “High blood pressure (hypertension): Treatments and drugs,” Mayo Clinic. Available at: http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/high-blood-pressure/DS00100/DSECTION=treatments-and-drugs.
  2. Susannah Fox and Maeve Duggan, “Tracking for Health.” (Pew Research Center: January 28, 2013) Available at: https://www.pewresearch.org/internet/Reports/2013/Tracking-for-Health.aspx
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