Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
Health & Fitness

Fitness app games no substitute for actual exercise

Darpan News Desk IANS, 23 Aug, 2014 08:25 AM
  • Fitness app games no substitute for actual exercise
There are nearly 31,000 health and fitness apps in the market and most of them use games to increase physical activity. Are they a real substitute for hitting the gym or walking in the park?
 
According to a study, gamification is currently the popular trend for mobile fitness app makers looking to cash into helping people get fit.
 
"It has just been assumed that gamified apps will work but there has been no research to show that they are effective for people in the long term," said Cameron Lister from Utah-based Brigham Young University.
 
Lister and health science professor Josh West analysed over 2,000 health and fitness apps and found that the majority of the most popular and widely used apps feature gamification.
 
As part of their study, the duo also downloaded and used 132 of the apps personally to see how well they worked.
 
They found that gamification is ignoring key elements of behaviour change and could be demotivating in the long run.
 
For example, over time people can view the rewards and badges on these apps as work instead of play. Once the rewards disappear, the motivation drops.
 
One suggestion is for the apps to also focus on skill development.
 
"There is a missed opportunity to influence healthy behaviour because most gamified health apps are only aimed at motivation," West added.
 
Motivation is important but people also need to develop skills that make behaviour change easy to do.
 
"It is like people assuming that you hate health and you hate taking care of your body so they offer to give you some stuff in order for you to do what they want you to do," Lister noted.
 
The authors believe more research needs to be carried out in an industry projected to hit the $2.8 billion mark by 2016.
 
The paper appeared in the Journal of Medical Internet Research.

MORE Health & Fitness ARTICLES

Pouring emotion helps breast cancer survivors

Pouring emotion helps breast cancer survivors
Writing down fears, emotions and benefits of a cancer diagnosis may improve health outcomes for Asian-American breast cancer survivors, a research reveals....

Pouring emotion helps breast cancer survivors

Some jobs increase risk of heart disease

Some jobs increase risk of heart disease
Want to know if your job can give you a heart attack? Workers in service and blue-collar occupations as well as unemployed people are...

Some jobs increase risk of heart disease

Why some people can cope with short sleep

Why some people can cope with short sleep
Most people require seven to nine hours of sleep to have proper daytime functioning, but some people can function normally on less than six hours of sleep...

Why some people can cope with short sleep

'Increasing alcohol cost curbs harmful drinking'

'Increasing alcohol cost curbs harmful drinking'
Reducing alcohol's affordability is the most effective way to reduce alcohol-related harm in people, says a study...

'Increasing alcohol cost curbs harmful drinking'

Share domestic chores for super sex life

Share domestic chores for super sex life
Do you often ignore sharing household chores with your spouse? Start helping her from now on as it comes with an extra incentive - better, hotter sex....

Share domestic chores for super sex life

Body, health myths exposed

Body, health myths exposed
From drinking eight glasses of water everyday to eating food before going to bed helps in storing fat are some of the health guidelines that doctors....

Body, health myths exposed