Individuals on alert: digital epidemiology and the individualization of surveillance

Abstract This article examines how digital epidemiology and eHealth coalesce into a powerful health surveillance system that fundamentally changes present notions of body and health. In the age of Big Data and Quantified Self, the conceptual and practical distinctions between individual and populati...

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Main Author: Silja Samerski
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-06-01
Series:Life Sciences, Society and Policy
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40504-018-0076-z
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spelling doaj-71cf441986eb4542b0e0e140f77fa3892020-11-24T22:07:24ZengBMCLife Sciences, Society and Policy2195-78192018-06-0114111110.1186/s40504-018-0076-zIndividuals on alert: digital epidemiology and the individualization of surveillanceSilja Samerski0Department of Anthropology and Cultural Studies, University of BremenAbstract This article examines how digital epidemiology and eHealth coalesce into a powerful health surveillance system that fundamentally changes present notions of body and health. In the age of Big Data and Quantified Self, the conceptual and practical distinctions between individual and population body, personal and public health, surveillance and health care are diminishing. Expanding on Armstrong’s concept of “surveillance medicine” to “quantified self medicine” and drawing on my own research on the symbolic power of statistical constructs in medical encounters, this article explores the impact of digital health surveillance on people’s perceptions, actions and subjectivities. It discusses the epistemic confusions and paradoxes produced by a health care system that increasingly treats patients as risk profiles and prompts them to do the same, namely to perceive and manage themselves as a bundle of health and security risks. Since these risks are necessarily constructed in reference to epidemiological data that postulate a statistical gaze, they also construct or make-up disembodied “individuals on alert”.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40504-018-0076-zQuantified self medicineSurveillanceSocial and cultural implicationsSecuritization of the bodyGeneralization of suspicion
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Silja Samerski
spellingShingle Silja Samerski
Individuals on alert: digital epidemiology and the individualization of surveillance
Life Sciences, Society and Policy
Quantified self medicine
Surveillance
Social and cultural implications
Securitization of the body
Generalization of suspicion
author_facet Silja Samerski
author_sort Silja Samerski
title Individuals on alert: digital epidemiology and the individualization of surveillance
title_short Individuals on alert: digital epidemiology and the individualization of surveillance
title_full Individuals on alert: digital epidemiology and the individualization of surveillance
title_fullStr Individuals on alert: digital epidemiology and the individualization of surveillance
title_full_unstemmed Individuals on alert: digital epidemiology and the individualization of surveillance
title_sort individuals on alert: digital epidemiology and the individualization of surveillance
publisher BMC
series Life Sciences, Society and Policy
issn 2195-7819
publishDate 2018-06-01
description Abstract This article examines how digital epidemiology and eHealth coalesce into a powerful health surveillance system that fundamentally changes present notions of body and health. In the age of Big Data and Quantified Self, the conceptual and practical distinctions between individual and population body, personal and public health, surveillance and health care are diminishing. Expanding on Armstrong’s concept of “surveillance medicine” to “quantified self medicine” and drawing on my own research on the symbolic power of statistical constructs in medical encounters, this article explores the impact of digital health surveillance on people’s perceptions, actions and subjectivities. It discusses the epistemic confusions and paradoxes produced by a health care system that increasingly treats patients as risk profiles and prompts them to do the same, namely to perceive and manage themselves as a bundle of health and security risks. Since these risks are necessarily constructed in reference to epidemiological data that postulate a statistical gaze, they also construct or make-up disembodied “individuals on alert”.
topic Quantified self medicine
Surveillance
Social and cultural implications
Securitization of the body
Generalization of suspicion
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40504-018-0076-z
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