MedCity News argued that metabolic care still leans on episodic measures such as BMI, A1C, blood pressure and lipids, leaving clinicians with a partial view of patient risk.
The article says digital health has often worsened that fragmentation by creating separate programs for weight, diabetes and hypertension instead of integrating overlapping signals into whole-person care.
A proposed alternative is a single longitudinal model combining glycemic trends, weight trajectory, blood pressure, lipid levels, comorbidities, medication burden and behavioral consistency to flag stability or early decline.
Continuous data such as sleep, heart-rate variability, activity and recovery should feed that model, shifting digital health from standalone engagement tools to clinical infrastructure for earlier intervention.
The broader aim is to match low-acuity patients with lifestyle support and higher-risk patients with physician-led treatment, reducing both undertreatment and over-medicalization in a costly disease area.