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Can FitBits help treat veterans for PTSD?

Can FitBits help treat veterans for PTSD?

  • A new study explores using wearable devices like FitBits to help veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) adjust to civilian life.
  • The study, which involved 74 recently discharged US veterans, found that wearing a device on their wrist and self-reporting through a daily questionnaire could help doctors and therapists monitor the presence and predict the exacerbation of PTSD symptoms.
  • Researchers believe that remote measurement devices like FitBits can provide valuable data to healthcare providers, helping them identify patients who need behavioral health therapy or other specialized care.
  • The study also found that PTSD is a common condition among veterans, with an estimated 9.4% of the military population affected, and that it often co-occurs with cannabis use disorder.
  • The researchers hope to develop simple-to-use technologies like FitBits as a tool to help ease veterans’ transition to post-service life, particularly in conjunction with mental health treatment and care.

A man covers his face with both hands.

A new study explores using remote-measurement devices like FitBits to help former soldiers readjust to civilian life.

A newly discharged American military veteran struggles emotionally to quiet memories from the battlefield. He smokes cannabis, increasingly, to fall asleep at night and to get through the day.

Whether receiving mental health treatment or not—and half of all trauma-exposed former soldiers do not, researchers say—the ex-soldiers may benefit from wearing a Fitbit or an Apple Watch around the clock in coordination with their health care provider.

Data from such remote measurement devices could help doctors and therapists see the presence, and predict the exacerbation, of serious symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, according to the new study of dozens of US veterans over three months.

In the study, a group of 74 recently demobilized veterans agreed to wear a device on their wrist 24/7 as well as self-report through a brief daily questionnaire. The goal was to observe how the use of real-time data collected passively (through remote measurement) and actively (via a survey) could help with routing trauma sufferers to behavioral health therapists and other health care specialists as needed, says Shaddy Saba, assistant professor at the NYU Silver School of Social Work and a coauthor of the study looking at PTSD and cannabis abuse among veterans.

“Unfortunately, it is hard to predict when these problems will develop or escalate,” Saba says, explaining that the broad popularity of devices offers new promise for tracking patients.

Veterans from the US wars in Iraq and Afghanistan total over 2 million Americans. While estimates of PTSD incidence vary, a national survey in 2019-20 placed it at 9.4% of the military population, exceeding the 2016 estimate of 8.1%. PTSD is the most common condition that co-occurs with cannabis use disorder, according to research cited in this study.

Saba came to the study naturally; his research bridges behavioral health, technology, and advanced analytic methods. He first became interested in working with veterans as a social worker at the Veterans Administration in Pittsburgh. At NYU Silver, he focuses on co-occurring problems among populations facing heightened perils, particularly veterans, using both theory-guided and data-driven methods to understand how conditions arise and interact. His research is informed, too, by over a decade of clinical practice in mental health and substance use treatment settings.

For this study, Saba teamed with Daniel Leightley of Kings College London, a researcher on digital epidemiology and reservist in the UK armed forces, and Jordan Davis, Saba’s former doctoral advisor at University of Southern California who is now at RAND–among other experts.

With Veterans Day approaching, Saba digs into the potential use of simple-to-use technologies to help ease veterans’ transition to post-service life:

The post Can FitBits help treat veterans for PTSD? appeared first on Futurity.

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Q. Can FitBits help treat veterans for PTSD?
A. According to a new study, wearing a Fitbit or an Apple Watch around the clock may help doctors and therapists see the presence and predict the exacerbation of serious symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in veterans.

Q. How many veterans from the US wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are affected by PTSD?
A. There are over 2 million Americans who have served in these wars, with an estimated 9.4% of the military population experiencing PTSD.

Q. What is the most common condition that co-occurs with cannabis use disorder among veterans?
A. According to research cited in the study, PTSD is the most common condition that co-occurs with cannabis use disorder among veterans.

Q. How did the researchers collect data for their study on FitBits and PTSD?
A. The researchers collected data from 74 recently demobilized veterans who wore a device on their wrist 24/7 and self-reported through a brief daily questionnaire.

Q. What is the potential benefit of using remote measurement devices like FitBits to help veterans with PTSD?
A. The use of remote measurement devices could help doctors and therapists see the presence and predict the exacerbation of serious symptoms of PTSD, allowing for more targeted treatment.

Q. How did Shaddy Saba become interested in working with veterans on PTSD research?
A. Saba became interested in working with veterans after his experience as a social worker at the Veterans Administration in Pittsburgh.

Q. What is Shaddy Saba’s current focus at NYU Silver School of Social Work?
A. Saba focuses on co-occurring problems among populations facing heightened perils, particularly veterans, using both theory-guided and data-driven methods to understand how conditions arise and interact.

Q. Who are some of the experts involved in this study on FitBits and PTSD?
A. The study was conducted by Shaddy Saba, Daniel Leightley of Kings College London, and Jordan Davis, among other experts.

Q. What is the potential for tracking patients with remote measurement devices like FitBits?
A. According to Saba, it is hard to predict when problems will develop or escalate, but the broad popularity of devices offers new promise for tracking patients.

Q. How does PTSD affect veterans’ daily lives?
A. Veterans with PTSD may struggle emotionally to quiet memories from the battlefield and may use cannabis increasingly to fall asleep at night and get through the day.