Pokemon Go promises 'quite significant' health benefits, says Dr. Raj - Action News
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Pokemon Go promises 'quite significant' health benefits, says Dr. Raj

Citing early research, one doctor is predicting some "quite significant" health benefits to the latest gaming craze.

'It's the tip of the iceberg, and I think that health can really benefit from this'

Pokemon Go craze likely has more pros than cons, says doc

8 years ago
Duration 3:44
Family physician and urgent care doctor Raj Bhardwaj says the game encourages a less sedentary lifestyle and will likely last longer than your average fad.

As thePokemon Go craze drives more and more users deep into augmented reality, you'll likely see more gamers with their heads down, clutching their smart phones, chasing elusive, imaginary creatures.

But one doctor is also seeing some "quite significant" health benefits to the latest gaming craze, which he says is pushing people toward a less sedentary lifestyle.

The game forcespeople to get up and moveby requiring them to go tophysical locations to catch new Pokemon, and to walk a certain number of kilometres to incubate an egg, for example.

"If it's not just a fad, if it actually catches on and keeps going, these health benefits are going to be quite significant," said Dr. Raj Bhardwaj in an interview with CBC Calgary News at 6.

Goups of Pokemon Go players told CBC News they're learning more about their cities as they travel from location to location in search of Pokemon. (Jonathan Ore/CBC)

Step counts nearly double

Some of the earliest data comes from Jawbone, a wearable activity tracker, andsays itsaverage self-declaredPokemon Go user's daily step count jumped from 6,000 to nearly 11,000 steps the weekend following the game's July 6 release.

"A lot of the people that are playing are probably displacing a lot of sitting," said Bhardwaj.

"We know that sitting is really, really bad for you.We know that activity like exercise at the gym will not undo the effects of 8 hours or 12 hours of sitting around."

The benefits aren't just physical either, Bhardwaj said.

"Early research is showing that people with social anxiety, people with autism spectrum disorder, they're getting into this game, and it's taking them out of their normal comfort level and going out and interactingwith other humans," he said.

Unlike with the Nintendo Wii which was similarly touted as a physical activity boosterbut which faded quickly, saidBhardwajPokemon Go's "shared hallucination" of augmented reality willencourage social interactions and therebyimprove the game's longevity among users, Bhardwaj said.

"It's the tip of the iceberg, and I think that health can really benefit from this."

With files from CBC Calgary News at 6