Summary: Mobile health technologies (wearable, portable, body-fixed sensors, or domestic-integrated devices) that quantify mobility in unsupervised, daily living environments are emerging as complementary clinical assessments. Data collected in these ecologically valid, patient-relevant settings can overcome limitations of conventional clinical assessments, as they capture fluctuating and rare events. These data could support clinical decision making and could also serve as outcomes in clinical trials. However, studies that directly compared assessments made in unsupervised and supervised (eg, in the laboratory or hospital) settings point to large disparities, even in the same parameters of mobility. These differences appear to be affected ...
The loss of mobility is a common trait in multiple health conditions (e.g., Parkinson's disease) and...
Abstract Wearable inertial sensors can be used to monitor mobility in real-world settings over exte...
Background:Identifying digital biomarkers of mobility is important for clinical trials in Parkinson’...
Summary: Mobile health technologies (wearable, portable, body-fixed sensors, or domestic-integrated ...
Abstract Background: The development of optimal strategies to treat impaired mobility related to ag...
BACKGROUND: The development of optimal strategies to treat impaired mobility related to ageing and c...
Background: Mobility is defined as the ability to independently move around the environment and is a...
Physical mobility is essential to health, and patients often rate it as a high-priority clinical out...
The loss of mobility is a common trait in multiple health conditions (e.g., Parkinson’s disease) an...
Mobility has been recognised as “the sixth vital sign” and its study and quantification usually occu...
Health care has had to adapt rapidly to COVID-19, and this in turn has highlighted a pressing need f...
Abstract Health care has had to adapt rapidly to COVID-19, and this in turn has highlighted a pressi...
Background Recent advances in wearable sensor technologies enable objective and long-term monitorin...
The loss of mobility is a common trait in multiple health conditions (e.g., Parkinson's disease) and...
Abstract Wearable inertial sensors can be used to monitor mobility in real-world settings over exte...
Background:Identifying digital biomarkers of mobility is important for clinical trials in Parkinson’...
Summary: Mobile health technologies (wearable, portable, body-fixed sensors, or domestic-integrated ...
Abstract Background: The development of optimal strategies to treat impaired mobility related to ag...
BACKGROUND: The development of optimal strategies to treat impaired mobility related to ageing and c...
Background: Mobility is defined as the ability to independently move around the environment and is a...
Physical mobility is essential to health, and patients often rate it as a high-priority clinical out...
The loss of mobility is a common trait in multiple health conditions (e.g., Parkinson’s disease) an...
Mobility has been recognised as “the sixth vital sign” and its study and quantification usually occu...
Health care has had to adapt rapidly to COVID-19, and this in turn has highlighted a pressing need f...
Abstract Health care has had to adapt rapidly to COVID-19, and this in turn has highlighted a pressi...
Background Recent advances in wearable sensor technologies enable objective and long-term monitorin...
The loss of mobility is a common trait in multiple health conditions (e.g., Parkinson's disease) and...
Abstract Wearable inertial sensors can be used to monitor mobility in real-world settings over exte...
Background:Identifying digital biomarkers of mobility is important for clinical trials in Parkinson’...