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Google Health App v5.02 rolls out with extra fixes for Fitbit users

Google just pushed out the version 5.02 update for its new Health app to iron out some of the main kinks from the big Fitbit migration. This software release delivers on specific promises from the public optimization map that the company shared last month to help calm down frustrated users.

The transition from the classic Fitbit setup to the unified Google Health app is still rubbing a lot of long-term users the wrong way. Recent feedback threads show people are still annoyed by missing data charts, clunky food logging, and a messy home screen. This latest update tries to fix some those headaches.


Today and health tabs offer better customization options

A lot of the frustration with the big redesign comes down to data feeling buried under too many menus. Now you can hit the pencil icon in the main metrics section to switch between a standard view and an expanded layout. This lets you see more metrics right on the Today tab without having to swipe right.

The update also lets you easily swap the order of your metrics in edit mode by tapping a card and selecting the one you want to replace it with. For Android users, rearranging charts in the Key Metrics section of the Health tab gets a lot simpler with direct drag-and-drop support, though iOS users will have to wait until version 5.03.

The update also brings back the hourly activity charts that vanished during the initial platform overhaul. This means you can add those step-per-hour circular diagrams back to both your Today and Health dashboards.

Beyond the visual tweaks, the developers cleared up some annoying activity tracking bugs. They fixed an issue where manually logged exercises incorrectly reported zero steps or distance. They also corrected low-distance bugs on auto-detected bike rides.


Sleep logs and partner app data get better management

Sleep data gets a rewrite in this update to make overnight patterns easier to read at a glance. The restlessness bar now sits right next to your sleep stages graph so you can compare restlessness and awake data together, backed by improved detection for minor awake moments.

Android users get an easier way to track naps over time with separate tabs in the daily Sleep Score view, an addition scheduled for iPhone users in the next release. Full support for deleting sleep sessions is now live, and a bug that blocked people from editing their sleep sessions has finally been squashed.

Managing health data imported from third-party services is also much less of a headache now. You can delete individual exercise sessions, food logs, and weight logs synced from partner apps directly inside the Google Health app instead of diving into the Privacy Center.

If the data came from a direct integration, you can wipe it instantly. Logs from Health Connect or Apple Health will direct you to those specific platforms to complete the deletion until a future update removes that extra step.


Food logging sees massive layout improvements

Nutrition tracking received a comprehensive cleanup aimed at making the interface quicker to use. Food searches load much faster on both platforms, with Android users now seeing serving units and calorie counts directly in the search results.

Google also added macronutrient estimations right on the main logging page so you can preview your breakdown before saving the log. This makes it much simpler to eyeball your targets before committing.

The primary nutrition tile on the Today tab completely drops the old net calories layout. It now displays your total calorie intake as the top number and your remaining calories as the bottom number to give you a clearer snapshot of your daily target.


The roadmap ahead for the ecosystem

Even though this update cleans up a few immediate software bugs, several promises on the company development map are still up in the air. Big integration features like sending data directly to Apple Health are still scheduled for later this summer. The upcoming artificial intelligence coach layer is also causing a lot of debate among users who want real control over their workout adjustments rather than automated text summaries.

Right now the update seems to be rolling out in staggered waves across different regions. Quite a few people on community forums noted that you might need to manually clear out and re-add your home screen tiles to get the new layout options to pop up.

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Ivan Jovin

Ivan has been a tech journalist for over 12 years now, covering all kinds of technology issues. Based in the US - he is the guy who gets to dive deep into the latest wearable tech news.

Ivan Jovin has 2089 posts and counting. See all posts by Ivan Jovin

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