Munich / Frankfurt am Main, 30/06/2026Β A study by the global management consultancy Oliver Wyman, a Marsh company, and the industry organization GFU Consumer & Home Electronics shows that health technologies have become part of consumersβ everyday lives and will continue to gain importance in the coming years. According to the survey βHealth Tech in Bloom? From Wellbeing to Longevity,β 90 percent of respondents worldwide own at least one device that supports personal health. More than one in four respondents even has five or more health-tech devices. Wearables are the most widespread, led by smartwatches. Smart scales, fitness trackers, and blood pressure monitors are also very popular. In China, such health technology is used most frequently: seven out of ten people (70 percent) own five or more devices. In Germany, this is the case for one third (33 percent). For the study, around 4,000 people in six countries were surveyed β in addition to Germany and China, also in Brazil, India, South Korea, and the USA. In Germany, around 1,000 people took part in the representative survey.
In Germany and Brazil, an above-average number of people said they were stressed (72 percent). The perceived stress level is significantly lower in China (55 percent) and the USA (56 percent). The vast majority in China (95 percent) and India (91 percent) plan to purchase a new health-tech device within a year. In Germany (58 percent) and the USA (55 percent), the figure is still slightly more than half. In addition, three quarters of respondents worldwide plan to replace at least one device within the next twelve months.