Performance of consumer wrist-worn sleep tracking devices compared to polysomnography: a meta-analysis

Nov 1, 2024Journal of clinical sleep medicine : JCSM : official publication of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine

How well wrist-worn sleep trackers measure sleep compared to clinical sleep tests: a combined analysis

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Abstract

Data from 798 patients reveal significant differences in sleep parameters between consumer wrist-worn sleep tracking devices and polysomnography.

  • Total sleep time measured by consumer devices was on average 16.854 minutes shorter than that recorded by polysomnography.
  • Sleep efficiency was lower by 4.691% in consumer devices compared to polysomnography.
  • Sleep latency was longer by 2.574 minutes according to consumer devices than polysomnography.
  • Wake after sleep onset was longer by 13.255 minutes in consumer devices compared to polysomnography.
  • No significant difference was found in wake after sleep onset between Fitbit and polysomnography.
  • Fitbit reported longer sleep latency compared to other devices, which measured longer wake after sleep onset.

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