Last year, when I decided to get my 11-year-old son a fitness tracker, it didn鈥檛 involve a lot of careful deliberation. The truth is, 国产吃瓜黑料 (my former place of employment) was hosting its annual outdoor-gear giveaway for staffers, and,听in a rare moment of selflessness, I听decided I鈥檇 nab something for him instead of stuffing yet another men鈥檚 large ski jacket into my swag bag. I chose a , a full-featured wearable that I figured he could happily nerd out on in his idle time. Two weeks later, the watch was only logging neglect, stashed on his desk right next to a dead bonsai tree and a weekly planner that didn鈥檛 appear to have been used in months.
Looking back now, perhaps I was fortunate. You can spend anywhere from $50 to $500 on one of these nifty little devices for your kids this holiday season, and it鈥檚 highly likely they鈥檒l grow bored of it just as quickly as my son did. That鈥檚 a costly mistake, Santa. What鈥檚 more, what if your kid actually loves the thing? As I discovered recently, while researching this story, choosing to place a smartwatch on a child鈥檚 wrist is a more fraught decision than I imagined. There鈥檚 no question that these gadgets can be great for encouraging children to stay active. There are also some surprising downsides, ones much worse than simply finding your marquee holiday purchase among the pile of forgotten gifts on a听dusty corner of their desk.
Fitness trackers, everything from simple step counters to the latest version of the Apple Watch, are big business鈥攁 $30 billion market in 2019, .听The category is expected to be worth more than $90 billion by 2027. It was a growth industry before COVID hit, but the global pandemic has only pushed for the devices higher. Since you鈥檙e an 国产吃瓜黑料 reader, I鈥檓 guessing there鈥檚 a good chance that you鈥檙e one of nearly who used a wearable device last year.
Affluent adults (, about 31 percent of U.S. adults) and people 听still make up the largest groups of users. However, companies are increasing their push to target听younger users. Garmin is one of the OGs in this field, having introduced the Vivofit Jr. in 2016. Fitbit rolled out the Ace 2 last year, an updated version of the stripped-down wristband that debuted in 2018 that it markets for ages six听and up. And while Apple doesn鈥檛 position its smartwatch for kids, I know I can鈥檛 be the only parent out there who has had to laugh off their child鈥檚 request for the new $300 Series 6.
When you see the sales pitches for the youth-targeted devices, it鈥檚 easy to think听they鈥檙e听being put out there for the greater social good. The global childhood-obesity epidemic gets top billing in Fitbit鈥檚 for the Ace 2. A for the Vivofit Jr. delivers a similar message鈥攚hile looking and sounding exactly like the upbeat, inspirational commercials we鈥檙e used to seeing for everything from rowing machines to yoga pants.
The selling point isn鈥檛 entirely off base: the monitoring devices get children moving, whether they鈥檙e being motivated by the games and rewards on the tracker听or by a parent behind the scenes using the information to push听them to be more active. That said,听more critical assessments of the devices argue that they can take the fun out of play, or that they can be a .听A of people in their teens and twenties in the International Journal of Eating Disorders revealed that those who used trackers as a way 鈥渢o manage weight and shape reported higher levels of eating and compulsive exercise psychopathology than those who reported using tools to improve health and fitness.鈥
Kids, especially younger ones, are predisposed to be active. The notion of strapping a device to their wrist and forcing them to move feels dystopian, as if we鈥檝e abandoned the idea听that play is foremost about having fun. Do we really want to turn children into fitness robots听mindlessly accruing more and more steps? Then again, in an era when log the recommended one hour of exercise a day, perhaps some tech intervention is warranted.
To help me sort through the debate, I reached out to Dr. Blaise Nemeth, an associate professor and provider at the . The first thing he points out is that fitness trackers are still a relatively new phenomenon, and the research into their effects on children is limited.
Nemeth uses trackers with young people in his pediatric fitness programs, but his focus is on helping kids make a听connection between how much they鈥檙e moving and how they feel. Research shows that people feel better and study or work more effectively when they are more active. So at the clinic where he practices, Nemeth uses the devices merely as a feedback tool to teach kids how to recognize the ways they perform differently in school, sports, or work on days when听they鈥檙e more active.
Trackers, Nemeth said, can also be useful for busy teenagers. With homework and an ever expanding list of extracurricular commitments, teens often bump exercise down their priority lists. If they鈥檙e stressed or having a tough time focusing, a quick-glance prompt from their smartwatch can serve as a reminder to get up and get moving for a bit, even if it鈥檚 just taking the dog on a walk around the neighborhood.
However, there are some things parents should consider before buying one. 鈥淚f it鈥檚 being forced on them, it can create conflict between parents and kids and undermine the objective to have fun moving their bodies,鈥 says Nemeth. 鈥淜ids tend to use them more when they鈥檙e the ones who want them, when they鈥檙e the ones in charge of the information. They tend to use them less, and they鈥檙e less happy with them, when the parents are in charge of it and parents are in charge of the information.鈥
To avoid the potential pitfalls that come with fitness trackers, you have to honestly assess your motivations for buying one鈥攁nd those of the person you鈥檙e buying it for. Is your kid an anxious type, one who might end up obsessing over the data at the expense of having actual fun? (If they听end听up pacing the hallways at night to reach their听step count before bedtime, no one鈥檚 really benefiting.) If your child is struggling with body-image issues, know that one of these devices could exacerbate that. And while it may be difficult to admit, if you鈥檙e the kind of parent that tends to hover, own up to it and skip the tracker.
That said, if you鈥檙e just looking for a fun way to help your kids be more active鈥攐r make their holiday dreams come true鈥攁 fitness tracker can still be a good option. Just don鈥檛 forget your role in all this. Taking the time to share the joy of hiking, running, skiing, basketball鈥攚hatever outdoor activity you love鈥攚ith your kids will be way more effective in the long run than a swanky $400 watch.