Business Law and Ethics
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-4666-8195-8.ch069
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The Ethical Implications of Personal Health Monitoring

Abstract: Personal Health Monitoring (PHM) uses electronic devices which monitor and record health

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Cited by 21 publications
(41 citation statements)
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References 84 publications
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“…At its best, H-IoT will help improve a user's health by generating data about the user's health and providing monitoring of conditions to supplement other forms of medical and social care. User's safety can, however, be placed at risk if H-IoT results in poorer quality of care, for instance if used as a replacement for human care [2]. In practice, this principle would require that H-IoT data to be used to inform the care of individual users and the advancement of medical knowledge and techniques.…”
Section: Non-maleficence and Beneficencementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…At its best, H-IoT will help improve a user's health by generating data about the user's health and providing monitoring of conditions to supplement other forms of medical and social care. User's safety can, however, be placed at risk if H-IoT results in poorer quality of care, for instance if used as a replacement for human care [2]. In practice, this principle would require that H-IoT data to be used to inform the care of individual users and the advancement of medical knowledge and techniques.…”
Section: Non-maleficence and Beneficencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…A risk exists of using H-IoT with elderly users as a proxy for human care, or to shift care burdens from formal medical and social care institutions to the community and informal carers [2]. For the former, devices can be designed to periodically remind third party carers to visit the user in person to avoid social isolation.…”
Section: H-iot For Elderly Usersmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The ethical acceptability of the latter solution must, however, be questioned, as it violates the norm that H-IoT should only be used as needed, based on the particular situation of an individual (Mittelstadt et al 2014) "monitoring for monitoring's sake" (Bowes et al 2012), or pursuing monitoring as an end in itself (Coughlin et al 2007;McLean 2011) is to be avoided.…”
Section: Obtrusiveness Stigma and Autonomymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…H-IoT can limit assessment of a patient's condition to a narrow range of easily measurable or quantifiable considerations, which could bias assessment towards an overly optimistic prediction of the technology's effects (Mittelstadt et al 2014;Coeckelbergh 2013). Conditions can increasingly be modelled and monitored through data, supplementing or replacing verbal accounts and physical care (cf.…”
Section: Decontextualisation Of Health and Well-beingmentioning
confidence: 99%