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Related Experiment Video

Updated: May 10, 2026

Methodology for Establishing a Community-Wide Life Laboratory for Capturing Unobtrusive and Continuous Remote Activity and Health Data
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Clinician Perspectives on Integrating Mobile Sensor Data Into Cancer Care: Mixed Methods Study.

Christianna Bartel1, Leeann Chen1, Krina C Durica1

  • 1University of Pittsburgh, 5051 Centre Avenue, Suite 5002, Pittsburgh, PA, 15213, United States, 1 412-623-5973.

JMIR Cancer
|May 8, 2026
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Oncology providers see value in wearable device data, especially vital signs and functioning metrics, for remote patient monitoring. While not altering clinical recommendations, this data boosts provider confidence and aids decision-making in cancer care.

Keywords:
cancerdoctor-patient communicationoncology providersremote monitoringsymptom managementwearable devices

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Area of Science:

  • Oncology
  • Digital Health
  • Health Informatics

Background:

  • Wearable devices generate health data patients may share with providers.
  • Limited research exists on oncology provider perspectives regarding wearable data integration in cancer care.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To understand oncology clinicians' preferences for wearable data types and clinical scenarios.
  • To identify benefits and barriers to integrating wearable device data into cancer care.
  • To explore how wearable data impacts clinical decision-making.

Main Methods:

  • 13 oncology clinicians completed online questionnaires and semistructured interviews.
  • Participants assessed the value of different wearable data types in various clinical scenarios.
  • Clinical recommendations were compared before and after reviewing patient wearable data via vignettes.

Main Results:

  • Providers prioritized vital sign, fall/functioning, and sleep/activity data.
  • Wearable data was deemed useful for remote monitoring during high-risk periods (e.g., post-hospitalization, new treatments).
  • Key themes included corroborating reports, identifying issues, care coordination, and communication, with data increasing decision-making confidence.

Conclusions:

  • Oncology providers recognize the clinical potential of wearable vital sign and functioning data for monitoring high-risk outpatients.
  • Objective wearable data can complement subjective reports, enhancing communication and care coordination.
  • Despite integration challenges, clinicians show cautious optimism about improving cancer care with wearable data.