Garmin wearables accurately measure resting heart rate; estimated VO₂ max has 5–8% error, and Fitness Age motivates but may increase anxiety in cardiovascular patients.
Does the Fitness Age construct in consumer wearables accurately reflect physiological status and how does it impact psychosocial outcomes in cardiovascular patients?
Fitness Age derived from consumer wearables is a useful behavioral and motivational proxy but lacks diagnostic precision and can cause algorithm-driven anxiety in cardiovascular patients, requiring active clinician contextualization.
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Background. Consumer wearables increasingly translate complex physiological data into simplified constructs intended for everyday users. One of the most influential of these is “Fitness Age” (FA), a proprietary metric primarily derived from estimated VO₂ max, resting heart rate, and activity patterns. Although widely adopted by patients and recreational athletes, its clinical validity and psychosocial consequences remain insufficiently examined, particularly in cardiovascular populations. Objective. This review critically evaluates the physiological foundations of the Fitness Age construct and explores its impact on patient health identity and illness perception, with particular relevance for cardiovascular care. Methods. A systematic review was conducted in accordance with PRISMA 2020 guidelines, covering publications from 2015 to 2026. Physiological validation studies comparing wearable-derived metrics with clinical gold standards (CPET, ECG, Holter monitoring) were analyzed alongside qualitative and quantitative research addressing psychosocial outcomes. Results. High-end Garmin wearables demonstrate strong accuracy for resting heart rate and nocturnal heart rate variability, while estimated VO₂ max shows a consistent error margin of approximately 5–8% in clinical cohorts. Psychosocially, Fitness Age functions as a powerful motivational tool but may also contribute to algorithm-driven anxiety and altered patient identity, particularly in individuals with established cardiovascular disease. Conclusions. Fitness Age should be interpreted as a behavioral and motivational proxy rather than a diagnostic indicator. Clinicians must actively contextualize wearable-derived metrics to harness their preventive potential while minimizing psychological harm.
Chojnowski et al. (Tue,) reported a other. Garmin wearables accurately measure resting heart rate; estimated VO₂ max has 5–8% error, and Fitness Age motivates but may increase anxiety in cardiovascular patients.