Wearing WHOOP More Frequently is Associated With Better Biometrics and Healthier Sleep and Activity Patterns
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Wearable devices are increasingly used for health monitoring, yet the impact of consistent wear on physiological and behavioral outcomes is unclear. Leveraging nearly a million days and nights of longitudinal data from 11,914 subscribers, we examined associations between the frequency of wearing a wrist-worn wearable device (WHOOP Inc., Boston, MA) and 12-week changes in biometric, sleep, and activity profiles, modeling both between and within-person effects. Higher average wear frequency, and week-to-week increases in wear, were associated with lower resting heart rate (RHR), higher heart rate variability (HRV), longer and more consistent sleep, and greater weekly and daily physical activity duration (Ps< 0.01). A within-person multiple mediation analysis indicated that increased sleep duration partially mediated the association between wear frequency and standardized (z-scored) RHR (indirect effect = -0.0387 [95% CI: -0.0464, -0.0326]), whereas physical activity minutes did not (indirect effect = 0.0003 [95% CI: -0.0036, 0.0040]). Granger causality analysis revealed a modest but notable association between prior wear frequency and future RHR in participants averaging ≤5 days of weekly wear (P< 0.05 in 10.92% of tests). While further research is needed, our findings provide real-world evidence that sustained wearable engagement may support healthier habits and improved physiological outcomes over time