M-health technologies: configuring bodies and health in surveillance society
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Transcript of M-health technologies: configuring bodies and health in surveillance society
M-HEALTH TECHNOLOGIES: CONFIGURING BODIES AND HEALTH IN SURVEILLANCE SOCIETY
Deborah Lupton, Department of Sociology and Social Policy, University of Sydney
What is m-health?
• Using Web 2.0 platforms incorporating:• social media such as Facebook, YouTube,
Twitter, blogs and wikis • mobile wireless computer technologies such
as smartphones and tablet computers• to measure health indices, provide treatment
regimens and promote health.
Medical biometric devices
• Smart pill boxes• Blood glucose• Blood chemistry readings• Blood pressure, heart rate and cardiac output
readings • Movement sensors
Commercial health apps
• Exercise programs• Digitalised scales and blood pressure devices• Menstrual cycles and ovulation patterns• Sleep patterns• Hearing tests• Pregnancy and labour logs• Fat and lean body mass using a caliper• Alcohol intake
Theorising the body/machine interface
• The cyborg body• The post-human body• The surveillant medical gaze• Surveillant assemblages• Data-doubles• Participatory surveillance
Some new approaches …
• The spectacular body• Prosthetic culture• Technology use as performance• Domesticating technologies – the social life of
things
Exhibit from Body Worlds
Example of medical app
Stelarc – Third Hand
Stelarc – Third Ear
Theorising Stelarc’s work
Electronic sensory becomes our new sensory skinThe body performing beyond the boundaries of its skinThe body as a nexus or node of collaborating agents‘We are all Stelarcs now’
Future research questions
• What are the implications for subjectivities and embodiment in the world of m-health?
• How are the assemblages of m-health technologies/practices/flesh enacted and lived?
• What are the political dimensions and power relations inherent in the use of these technologies?
• How will privacy (or loss of privacy) be defined and experienced in the context of these media?
• What are the implications for how people conduct their everyday lives and intimate relationships?
More specifically …
• Will the ‘nagging voices’ of the health promoting messages automatically issuing forth from a person’s mobile device be eventually ignored by its user?
• Will m-health technologies produce a cyborg, post-human self in which the routine collection of data about bodily actions and functions is simply incorporated unproblematically into the user’s sense of selfhood and embodiment?
• How will concepts of ‘health’ itself be shaped and understood in a context in which one’s biometric indicators may be constantly measured, analysed and displayed publicly?
• Will the ‘objective’ measurements offered by mobile devices take precedence over the ‘subjective’ assessments offered by the senses of the fleshly body?