The Digital Exposome: A Life Course Framework for Health in the Digital Age.
Digital technologies are reshaping human behavior, health care delivery, and population health; however, their cumulative effects across the lifespan remain underexplored. This viewpoint argues that exposures arising from interactions with digital technologies should be formally integrated into exposome science as a distinct, measurable component of the human environment. Our aims are to (1) redefine the digital component of the exposome (the digital exposome) within the broader exposome framework, (2) examine its life course implications for health and equity, and (3) outline a research and policy agenda to enable its systematic measurement and integration into clinical and public health practice. Digital technology-related exposures can confer benefits such as enhanced health monitoring, personalized interventions, improved access to care, and the promotion of healthy behaviors. However, they may also introduce potential risks, including mental health challenges, cognitive and circadian disruptions, sedentary lifestyles, exposure to misinformation, and widening inequities among vulnerable populations. Despite their ubiquity, digital technology-related exposures remain poorly integrated into clinical medicine, epidemiology, or public and global health policies. Drawing on interdisciplinary evidence from exposure science, epidemiology, and digital phenotyping research, we propose a refined conceptual definition of the digital exposome grounded in the classical exposome domains. We propose redefining the digital exposome as the full spectrum of exposures resulting from interactions or proximities with digital technologies and their combined influence on health across the lifespan. This framework conceptualizes digital technology-related exposures as a dynamic set of environmental influences operating through sociotechnical, behavioral, and biological pathways over the life course. To operationalize this framework, we discuss practical approaches using validated behavioral instruments, objective device use logs, ecological momentary assessments, smartphone-based digital phenotyping, and wearable sensing technologies. Systematic measurement, large-scale longitudinal studies, and harmonized exposure metrics are needed to characterize the cumulative health impacts of digital environments more accurately. Emerging tools such as digital markers or biomarkers and digital phenotypes offer promising opportunities to link real-world technology use with physiological and biological outcomes, thereby supporting precision medicine and population health strategies. Ethical governance, privacy safeguards, and equity considerations must be embedded from the start, drawing on emerging exposomethics frameworks. Recognizing the digital exposome as a modifiable determinant of health offers a foundation for evidence-based guidance, prevention strategies, and policy interventions suited to increasingly digital societies. By integrating digital technology-related exposures into exposome science, clinical practice, and public health research, this viewpoint seeks to foster interdisciplinary dialogue, guide future empirical work, and support the development of safer and more equitable digital environments across the lifespan.