Evidence for positive long- and short-term effects of vaccinations against COVID-19 in wearable sensor metrics

Abstract

Vaccines are among the most powerful tools to combat the COVID-19 pandemic. They are highly effective against infection and substantially reduce the risk of severe disease, hospitalization, ICU admission, and death. However, their potential for attenuating long-term changes in personal health and health-related wellbeing after a SARS-CoV-2 infection remains a subject of debate. Such effects can be effectively monitored at the individual level by analyzing physiological data collected by consumer-grade wearable sensors. Here, we investigate changes in resting heart rate, daily physical activity, and sleep duration around a SARS-CoV-2 infection stratified by vaccination status. Data were collected over a period of 2 years in the context of the German Corona Data Donation Project with around 190,000 monthly active participants. Compared to their unvaccinated counterparts, we find that vaccinated individuals, on average, experience smaller changes in their vital data that also return to normal levels more quickly. Likewise, extreme changes in vitals during the acute phase of the disease occur less frequently in vaccinated individuals. Our results solidify evidence that vaccines can mitigate long-term detrimental effects of SARS-CoV-2 infections both in terms of duration and magnitude. Furthermore, they demonstrate the value of large-scale, high-resolution wearable sensor data in public health research.

Publication
PNAS Nexus
Marc Wiedermann
Alumnus

Researcher and Data Scientist with strong interests in time series and network analysis, predictive models and low-dimensional dynamical systems for the spread of human behavior.

Annika Rose
Annika Rose
PhD Student
Benjamin F. Maier
Alumnus

My research interests include the spread of infectious diseases, complex systems, and network theory

Jakob Kolb
Alumnus

Ex-academic, now focused on well tested, maintainable and scalable applications.

David Hinrichs
Alumnus
Dirk Brockmann
Dirk Brockmann
Professor

Head of Research on Complex Systems Group