Sasha
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
My thinking was that by snapshotting many people over 6 months (say), we'd capture how many people experience marked improvements over a six-month period. If each of us only has a marked improvement every ten years on average, for instance, you could capture someone having that improvement if you had twenty people followed for a half-year (again, on average, hence we'd need big numbers).I know I'm only one person, but that wouldn't capture some of the important things about me. My fluctuations tend to play out over years, not months.
I agree that longer-term tracking would be good but again, I can't see many people wearing trackers consistently for years on end.
I agree that day-to-day wellness won't be captured but bigger, longer-term changes would be, for the most part.Also, there's often a complete mismatch between what I do and how I feel. Sometimes I'm still active when I feel terrible and shouldn't be doing anything (today would be a good example!) because I need to. Other times I feel as good as I ever do, and just sit on the sofa just listening to music or playing a few tunes. My step counts aren't much affected by my severity status; I can't walk any further on a good day than I can on the worst. They will sometimes show a small increase, but that may be down to necessity rather than feeling better.