移动医疗作为一种全球现象的伦理。

IF 1.7 2区 哲学 Q2 ETHICS
Bioethics Pub Date : 2024-06-06 DOI:10.1111/bioe.13311
Verina Wild, Tereza Hendl, Bianca Jansky
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The World Health Organization (WHO), for example, published a report in 2018 on mHealth claiming that “The spread of digital technologies and global interconnectedness has a significant potential to accelerate Member States' progress towards achieving universal health coverage, including ensuring access to quality health services.”2</p><p>This special issue is part of our broader research within the project “META - mHealth: Ethical, Legal, Social aspects in the technological age3”. In this editorial we want to emphasize that the global and globalized scope of mHealth is essential to this technology, but is too often neglected in the ethical and social discussions. Increasingly, providers, developers and marketing companies are organized as international companies, with some of them carrying massive market interest and power, and apps can be downloaded across the globe. The generated data are globally collected and processed. Users are connected via global digital networks too. mHealth also facilitates new forms of patient activism, dissolving geographical boundaries through their global connectivity, but potentially creating new barriers and inequalities.4 Various mHealth technologies are utilized to tackle urgent issues in global health,5 while the mass generation of (health) data as a global phenomenon and the many related opportunities and challenges are debated among scholars and policy makers.6</p><p>The rapid developments in the mHealth field are particularly significant for influencing user self-diagnosis, self-monitoring, health prevention, and remote management of chronic and acute conditions. Such far-reaching developments that impact health in all its bio-psycho-social dimensions have ethical implications on an individual, societal and global scale. However, most ethical discussions are Western-centric, despite the significance of the ethical implications that arise from a global, globalized and international perspective,7 for example: Whose understanding of health and particular cultural norms does mHealth technology reflect? How do predominantly Western mHealth market and power dynamics influence and shape the normative concepts of (global) health, public health and health justice? How are local contexts and their understandings of health, health care and privacy accounted for? How are profits, benefits and burdens of globalized mHealth distributed? How does mHealth technology affect population health in different parts of the world? Which global and local socio-economic inequalities do these technologies help to reduce or risk to exacerbate? Which steps are needed to mitigate bias and discrimination in mHealth and prevent detrimental impact on marginalised and vulnerable groups (on the grounds of race, gender, class etc), in order to create better conditions for global health (justice)?</p><p>In 2021 we have organised the Brocher workshop “The ethics of mHealth as a global phenomenon”, which explored a variety of ethical concerns raised by the globalisation of mHealth. Themes that we discussed encompassed concerns of intersectionality, prioritarian ethics for structurally vulnerable populations and global South(s) contexts and issues stemming from the privatization of mHealth in the broader context of public health and global health justice. Debates at the workshop have built the foundations for the four papers in this special issue, which involves the work of some of the workshop participants and other international colleagues.</p><p>In the first paper, Karola Kreitmair explores concerns of empowerment in a booming global market with mHealth. In particular, she investigates whether “direct to-consumer” (DTC) mHealth technology facilitates five elements identified by her as constitutive to empowerment: knowledge, control, responsibility, the availability of good choices, and healthy desires. Considering the likelihood that DTC mHealth technology may be enhancing merely the feeling and perception of these elements – instead of empowerment itself – she argues that the language of DTC mHealth technology as a tool of empowerment is problematic.</p><p>The second paper by Tereza Hendl and Ayush Shukla takes a closer look at the potential of digital health technologies for democratizing health care. The researchers observe that dominant debates envision democratization with digital health as a matter of access: to health information, health care, and patient empowerment. Yet, building on the growing pool of empirical data on digital health, they argue that these technologies come short of materializing these goals, given the unequal health outcomes they facilitate. As such, they argue that not only debates on democratization need to be connected to concerns of social determinants of health but also debates on the impact of digital health need to go far beyond democratization and engage with concerns of health justice.</p><p>The third paper by Meadi et al. explores the ethics of mental health chatbots (MHCBs), which are increasingly used across the globe. The authors observe that the rapidly advancing MHCB technologies lack empathic understanding, which has adverse consequences for psychotherapy. 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Users are connected via global digital networks too. mHealth also facilitates new forms of patient activism, dissolving geographical boundaries through their global connectivity, but potentially creating new barriers and inequalities.4 Various mHealth technologies are utilized to tackle urgent issues in global health,5 while the mass generation of (health) data as a global phenomenon and the many related opportunities and challenges are debated among scholars and policy makers.6</p><p>The rapid developments in the mHealth field are particularly significant for influencing user self-diagnosis, self-monitoring, health prevention, and remote management of chronic and acute conditions. Such far-reaching developments that impact health in all its bio-psycho-social dimensions have ethical implications on an individual, societal and global scale. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

在过去几年里,移动医疗技术与互联网驱动的数据交换相结合,正在许多国家得到广泛应用。1 这些技术涉及各种应用程序、可穿戴设备、植入物和其他数字设备,旨在改善健康状况。随着智能手机在全球范围内的使用日益增多,越来越多的全球人口可以使用功能强大的手持工具,这些工具几乎可以持续使用并与其他设备和用户进行互动,除其他外,还可以实时共享健康数据,从而形成一个几乎无处不在的健康数据技术网络。例如,世界卫生组织(WHO)于 2018 年发布了一份关于移动医疗的报告,声称 "数字技术的传播和全球互联互通在加快会员国实现全民健康覆盖方面具有巨大潜力,包括确保获得优质医疗服务 "2:本特刊是我们在 "META--移动医疗:技术时代的伦理、法律和社会问题3 "项目中开展的广泛研究的一部分。在这篇社论中,我们想强调的是,移动医疗的全球和全球化范围对这项技术至关重要,但在伦理和社会讨论中却常常被忽视。提供商、开发商和营销公司越来越多地组成国际公司,其中一些公司拥有巨大的市场利益和实力,应用程序可以在全球下载。产生的数据在全球范围内收集和处理。移动保健还促进了新形式的病人行动主义,通过其全球连通性消解了地理界限,但也可能造成新的障碍和不平等。各种移动保健技术被用来解决全球卫生方面的紧迫问题,5 而(健康)数据的大量产生作为一种全球现象,以及许多相关的机遇和挑战在学者和政策制定者中引起了争论。6 移动保健领域的快速发展对于影响用户自我诊断、自我监测、健康预防以及慢性病和急性病的远程管理尤为重要。6 移动保健领域的快速发展对于影响用户自我诊断、自我监测、健康预防和远程管理慢性病和急性病尤为重 要。这种影响健康的生物-心理-社会层面的深远发展对个人、社会和全球范围都有伦理影响。然而,大多数伦理讨论都是以西方为中心的,尽管从全球、全球化和国际的角度来 看,7 所产生的伦理影响十分重要:移动保健技术反映了谁对健康和特定文化规范的理解?以西方为主的移动医疗市场和权力动态如何影响和塑造(全球)卫生、公共卫生和卫生 公正的规范性概念?如何考虑当地情况及其对健康、医疗保健和隐私的理解?全球化移动医疗的利润、利益和负担是如何分配的?移动医疗技术如何影响世界不同地区的人口健康?这些技术有助于减少或可能加剧哪些全球和地方社会经济不平等?需要采取哪些措施来减少移动医疗中的偏见和歧视,防止对边缘化群体和弱势群体(基于种族、性别、阶级等)造成不利影响,从而为全球健康(公正)创造更好的条件?2021 年,我们组织了布罗彻研讨会 "作为全球现象的移动医疗的伦理问题",探讨了移动医疗全球化引发的各种伦理问题。我们讨论的主题包括交叉性问题、结构性弱势群体和全球南方背景下的优先伦理问题,以及在更广泛的公共卫生和全球卫生正义背景下移动医疗私有化所引发的问题。在第一篇论文中,Karola Kreitmair 探讨了在全球移动医疗市场蓬勃发展的情况下,如何增强人们的能力。在第一篇论文中,Karola Kreitmair 探讨了在全球移动医疗市场蓬勃发展的情况下增强能力的问题。她特别研究了 "直接面向消费者"(DTC)的移动医疗技术是否有助于增强能力,她认为这五个要素是:知识、控制、责任、良好选择的可获得性以及健康的愿望。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The ethics of mHealth as a global phenomenon

Over the last years, mHealth technologies in combination with internet-driven data exchange are being widely implemented in many countries.1 These involve a diverse range of apps, wearables, implants and other digital devices that purport to improve health. With the increasing use of smartphones worldwide, a growing percentage of the global population has access to powerful handheld tools that are in almost continuous use and interaction with other devices and users, enabling, among other things, the real time sharing of health data and resulting in a near ubiquitous network of health data technologies. mHealth thus has the potential to widely impact on individual health, on health care provision, health care systems and public health throughout the world, and independently from the physical territory where the user is placed.

This development is endorsed by political and industrial stakeholders, also on a global scale. The World Health Organization (WHO), for example, published a report in 2018 on mHealth claiming that “The spread of digital technologies and global interconnectedness has a significant potential to accelerate Member States' progress towards achieving universal health coverage, including ensuring access to quality health services.”2

This special issue is part of our broader research within the project “META - mHealth: Ethical, Legal, Social aspects in the technological age3”. In this editorial we want to emphasize that the global and globalized scope of mHealth is essential to this technology, but is too often neglected in the ethical and social discussions. Increasingly, providers, developers and marketing companies are organized as international companies, with some of them carrying massive market interest and power, and apps can be downloaded across the globe. The generated data are globally collected and processed. Users are connected via global digital networks too. mHealth also facilitates new forms of patient activism, dissolving geographical boundaries through their global connectivity, but potentially creating new barriers and inequalities.4 Various mHealth technologies are utilized to tackle urgent issues in global health,5 while the mass generation of (health) data as a global phenomenon and the many related opportunities and challenges are debated among scholars and policy makers.6

The rapid developments in the mHealth field are particularly significant for influencing user self-diagnosis, self-monitoring, health prevention, and remote management of chronic and acute conditions. Such far-reaching developments that impact health in all its bio-psycho-social dimensions have ethical implications on an individual, societal and global scale. However, most ethical discussions are Western-centric, despite the significance of the ethical implications that arise from a global, globalized and international perspective,7 for example: Whose understanding of health and particular cultural norms does mHealth technology reflect? How do predominantly Western mHealth market and power dynamics influence and shape the normative concepts of (global) health, public health and health justice? How are local contexts and their understandings of health, health care and privacy accounted for? How are profits, benefits and burdens of globalized mHealth distributed? How does mHealth technology affect population health in different parts of the world? Which global and local socio-economic inequalities do these technologies help to reduce or risk to exacerbate? Which steps are needed to mitigate bias and discrimination in mHealth and prevent detrimental impact on marginalised and vulnerable groups (on the grounds of race, gender, class etc), in order to create better conditions for global health (justice)?

In 2021 we have organised the Brocher workshop “The ethics of mHealth as a global phenomenon”, which explored a variety of ethical concerns raised by the globalisation of mHealth. Themes that we discussed encompassed concerns of intersectionality, prioritarian ethics for structurally vulnerable populations and global South(s) contexts and issues stemming from the privatization of mHealth in the broader context of public health and global health justice. Debates at the workshop have built the foundations for the four papers in this special issue, which involves the work of some of the workshop participants and other international colleagues.

In the first paper, Karola Kreitmair explores concerns of empowerment in a booming global market with mHealth. In particular, she investigates whether “direct to-consumer” (DTC) mHealth technology facilitates five elements identified by her as constitutive to empowerment: knowledge, control, responsibility, the availability of good choices, and healthy desires. Considering the likelihood that DTC mHealth technology may be enhancing merely the feeling and perception of these elements – instead of empowerment itself – she argues that the language of DTC mHealth technology as a tool of empowerment is problematic.

The second paper by Tereza Hendl and Ayush Shukla takes a closer look at the potential of digital health technologies for democratizing health care. The researchers observe that dominant debates envision democratization with digital health as a matter of access: to health information, health care, and patient empowerment. Yet, building on the growing pool of empirical data on digital health, they argue that these technologies come short of materializing these goals, given the unequal health outcomes they facilitate. As such, they argue that not only debates on democratization need to be connected to concerns of social determinants of health but also debates on the impact of digital health need to go far beyond democratization and engage with concerns of health justice.

The third paper by Meadi et al. explores the ethics of mental health chatbots (MHCBs), which are increasingly used across the globe. The authors observe that the rapidly advancing MHCB technologies lack empathic understanding, which has adverse consequences for psychotherapy. Arguing that such limitations pose a threat to the quality and safety of care, Meadi et al. raise concerns about the increasingly widespread use of chatbots in mental health care, while discussing the need for establishing ethical boundaries for the use of MHCBs.

The fourth paper by Bianca Jansky, Tereza Hendl and Azakhiwe Nocanda zooms in onto patient-led open-source innovation for Type 1 Diabetes. The authors note that user-led innovation is commonly perceived as a bottom-up type of innovation. Yet, taking into consideration the broader global context shaped by stark socio-economic inequalities, it becomes apparent that the means of innovation are out of reach to many, especially structurally marginalised, racialized and non-Western populations. This not only means that results of innovation are themselves largely inaccessible to these populations, but also that it is unclear whether they are safe and beneficent to them. In response, the authors argue that proactive strategies are needed to ensure that open-source patient-led innovation will be more globally accessible, center the agency and health needs of the most underserved populations, as well as facilitate equitable and just health benefits.

The discussion about mHealth as a global phenomenon has many more ramifications, and we urge scholars to conceptualise the technology also as a global one, and to keep exploring the resulting ethical and social questions. In our view, the central goal of mHealth should be to improve individual, population and global health, including health equity. Much work is necessary, to formulate ethical norms and approaches to ethics that will be empirically informed and will account for structural inequalities and concerns of (global) health equity. We hope that this special issue will provide readers with ‘food for thought’ and inspire more work that will adapt, rethink and redefine existing concepts and strategies, and where necessary, adding new concepts in order to understand the bigger picture better and to adapt ethical analytic tools on the path to global health justice.

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来源期刊
Bioethics
Bioethics 医学-医学:伦理
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
9.10%
发文量
127
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: As medical technology continues to develop, the subject of bioethics has an ever increasing practical relevance for all those working in philosophy, medicine, law, sociology, public policy, education and related fields. Bioethics provides a forum for well-argued articles on the ethical questions raised by current issues such as: international collaborative clinical research in developing countries; public health; infectious disease; AIDS; managed care; genomics and stem cell research. These questions are considered in relation to concrete ethical, legal and policy problems, or in terms of the fundamental concepts, principles and theories used in discussions of such problems. Bioethics also features regular Background Briefings on important current debates in the field. These feature articles provide excellent material for bioethics scholars, teachers and students alike.
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