Reconfigurations of responsibility: health insurance policyholders' daily experiences of self-tracking

被引:0
|
作者
Presset, Bastien [1 ]
Tanninen, Maiju [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Lausanne, Inst Sport Sci, Fac Social & Polit Sci, Quartier Unictr, Batiment Synathlon, CH-1015 Lausanne, Switzerland
[2] Katholieke Univ Leuven, Ctr Sociol Res CeSO, Leuven, Belgium
基金
欧盟地平线“2020”;
关键词
Insurance; self-tracking; policyholders; responsibility; solidarity; RISK;
D O I
10.1080/17530350.2025.2458009
中图分类号
G [文化、科学、教育、体育]; C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ; 04 ;
摘要
The implementation of behavioral data and algorithmic technologies in insurance has sparked scholarly debate regarding their capability to disrupt the solidarity models of insurance. While the new insurance technologies' ability to individualize risk has limitations, their features might accentuate individual responsibility and obscure the reference groups that constitute the foundation of insurance solidarity, particularly for policyholders. Yet, little is known of how policyholders themselves experience these insurance schemes. Based on 21 interviews conducted with users of a Swiss self-tracking in insurance (STi) program, we analyze how policyholders enact responsibility and solidarity together with a STi technology. Our findings reveal tensions in users' daily experiences, highlighting frictions between solidarity as it is currently implemented in health insurance regulation and practices and the form embedded in STi interventions. Some users enthusiastically adopt the individualizing rationale of the technology, valuing self-responsibility and justifying it with the promise of reduced medical costs for everyone. Others struggle between their conviction with the established forms of solidarity and their desire to benefit from the programs. The results suggest that, although STi encounters regulative barriers, its current forms of implementation in users' daily lives lead to sociomaterial reconfigurations of morals at the microsocial level.
引用
收藏
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] The Perceived Utility of Smartphone and Wearable Sensor Data in Digital Self-tracking Technologies for Mental Health
    Kruzan, Kaylee Payne
    Ng, Ada
    Stiles-Shields, Colleen
    Lattie, Emily G.
    Mohr, David C.
    Reddy, Madhu
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2023 CHI CONFERENCE ON HUMAN FACTORS IN COMPUTING SYSTEMS (CHI 2023), 2023,
  • [42] Patient-driven Health Care Models: The Future Patient using Self-tracking Technologies
    Nikolajsen, Christina
    Dinesen, Birthe Irene
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INTEGRATED CARE, 2015, 15
  • [44] Self-Tracking Health Over Time: From the Use of Instagram to Perform Optimal Health to the Protective Shield of the Digital Detox
    Kent, Rachael
    SOCIAL MEDIA + SOCIETY, 2020, 6 (03):
  • [45] 'Pushed' self-tracking using digital technologies for chronic health condition management: a critical interpretive synthesis
    Morgan, Heather
    DIGITAL HEALTH, 2016, 2
  • [46] Editorial: Long-Term Self-Tracking for Life-Long Health and Well-Being
    Meyer, Jochen
    Gurrin, Cathal
    Price, Blaine
    Kay, Judy
    Jain, Ramesh
    FRONTIERS IN DIGITAL HEALTH, 2021, 3
  • [47] Mental Health Self-Tracking Preferences of Young Adults With Depression and Anxiety Not Engaged in Treatment: Qualitative Analysis
    Beltzer, Miranda L.
    Meyerhoff, Jonah
    Popowski, Sarah A.
    Mohr, David C.
    Kornfield, Rachel
    JMIR FORMATIVE RESEARCH, 2023, 7
  • [48] Changing emotional engagement with running through communal self-tracking: the implications of 'teleoaffective shaping' for public health
    Spotswood, Fiona
    Shankar, Avi
    Piwek, Lukasz
    SOCIOLOGY OF HEALTH & ILLNESS, 2020, 42 (04) : 772 - 788
  • [49] Self-tracking Reloaded: Applying Process Mining to Personalized Health Care from Labeled Sensor Data
    Sztyler, Timo
    Carmona, Josep
    Voelker, Johanna
    Stuckenschmidt, Heiner
    TRANSACTIONS ON PETRI NETS AND OTHER MODELS OF CONCURRENCY XI, 2016, 9930 : 160 - 180
  • [50] Adjusting Reality. The Contingency Dilemma in the Context of Popularised Practices of Digital Self-Tracking of Health Data
    Achatz, Johannes
    Selke, Stefan
    Wulf, Nele
    HISTORICAL SOCIAL RESEARCH-HISTORISCHE SOZIALFORSCHUNG, 2021, 46 (01): : 206 - 229