Insurance Customers’ Expectations for Sharing Health Data: Qualitative Survey Study

BackgroundInsurance organizations are essential stakeholders in health care ecosystems. For addressing future health care needs, insurance companies require access to health data to deliver preventative and proactive digital health services to customers. However, extant resea...

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Main Authors: Grundstrom, Casandra, Korhonen, Olli, Väyrynen, Karin, Isomursu, Minna
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2020-03-01
Series:JMIR Medical Informatics
Online Access:http://medinform.jmir.org/2020/3/e16102/
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spelling doaj-d1966d0ee98544128d13b2a3d9866a272021-05-03T04:37:41ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR Medical Informatics2291-96942020-03-0183e1610210.2196/16102Insurance Customers’ Expectations for Sharing Health Data: Qualitative Survey StudyGrundstrom, CasandraKorhonen, OlliVäyrynen, KarinIsomursu, Minna BackgroundInsurance organizations are essential stakeholders in health care ecosystems. For addressing future health care needs, insurance companies require access to health data to deliver preventative and proactive digital health services to customers. However, extant research is limited in examining the conditions that incentivize health data sharing. ObjectiveThis study aimed to (1) identify the expectations of insurance customers when sharing health data, (2) determine the perceived intrinsic value of health data, and (3) explore the conditions that aid in incentivizing health data sharing in the relationship between an insurance organization and its customer. MethodsA Web-based survey was distributed to randomly selected customers from a Finnish insurance organization through email. A single open-text answer was used for a qualitative data analysis through inductive coding, followed by a thematic analysis. Furthermore, the 4 constructs of commitment, power, reciprocity, and trust from the social exchange theory (SET) were applied as a framework. ResultsFrom the 5000 customers invited to participate, we received 452 surveys (response rate: 9.0%). Customer characteristics were found to reflect customer demographics. Of the 452 surveys, 48 (10.6%) open-text responses were skipped by the customer, 57 (12.6%) customers had no expectations from sharing health data, and 44 (9.7%) customers preferred to abstain from a data sharing relationship. Using the SET framework, we found that customers expected different conditions to be fulfilled by their insurance provider based on the commitment, power, reciprocity, and trust constructs. Of the 452 customers who completed the surveys, 64 (14.2%) customers required that the insurance organization meets their data treatment expectations (commitment). Overall, 4.9% (22/452) of customers were concerned about their health data being used against them to profile their health, to increase insurance prices, or to deny health insurance claims (power). A total of 28.5% (129/452) of customers expected some form of benefit, such as personalized digital health services, and 29.9% (135/452) of customers expected finance-related compensation (reciprocity). Furthermore, 7.5% (34/452) of customers expected some form of empathy from the insurance organization through enhanced transparency or an emotional connection (trust). ConclusionsTo aid in the design and development of digital health services, insurance organizations need to address the customers’ expectations when sharing their health data. We established the expectations of customers in the social exchange of health data and explored the perceived values of data as intangible goods. Actions by the insurance organization should aim to increase trust through a culture of transparency, commitment to treat health data in a prescribed manner, provide reciprocal benefits through digital health services that customers deem valuable, and assuage fears of health data being used to prevent providing insurance coverage or increase costs.http://medinform.jmir.org/2020/3/e16102/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Grundstrom, Casandra
Korhonen, Olli
Väyrynen, Karin
Isomursu, Minna
spellingShingle Grundstrom, Casandra
Korhonen, Olli
Väyrynen, Karin
Isomursu, Minna
Insurance Customers’ Expectations for Sharing Health Data: Qualitative Survey Study
JMIR Medical Informatics
author_facet Grundstrom, Casandra
Korhonen, Olli
Väyrynen, Karin
Isomursu, Minna
author_sort Grundstrom, Casandra
title Insurance Customers’ Expectations for Sharing Health Data: Qualitative Survey Study
title_short Insurance Customers’ Expectations for Sharing Health Data: Qualitative Survey Study
title_full Insurance Customers’ Expectations for Sharing Health Data: Qualitative Survey Study
title_fullStr Insurance Customers’ Expectations for Sharing Health Data: Qualitative Survey Study
title_full_unstemmed Insurance Customers’ Expectations for Sharing Health Data: Qualitative Survey Study
title_sort insurance customers’ expectations for sharing health data: qualitative survey study
publisher JMIR Publications
series JMIR Medical Informatics
issn 2291-9694
publishDate 2020-03-01
description BackgroundInsurance organizations are essential stakeholders in health care ecosystems. For addressing future health care needs, insurance companies require access to health data to deliver preventative and proactive digital health services to customers. However, extant research is limited in examining the conditions that incentivize health data sharing. ObjectiveThis study aimed to (1) identify the expectations of insurance customers when sharing health data, (2) determine the perceived intrinsic value of health data, and (3) explore the conditions that aid in incentivizing health data sharing in the relationship between an insurance organization and its customer. MethodsA Web-based survey was distributed to randomly selected customers from a Finnish insurance organization through email. A single open-text answer was used for a qualitative data analysis through inductive coding, followed by a thematic analysis. Furthermore, the 4 constructs of commitment, power, reciprocity, and trust from the social exchange theory (SET) were applied as a framework. ResultsFrom the 5000 customers invited to participate, we received 452 surveys (response rate: 9.0%). Customer characteristics were found to reflect customer demographics. Of the 452 surveys, 48 (10.6%) open-text responses were skipped by the customer, 57 (12.6%) customers had no expectations from sharing health data, and 44 (9.7%) customers preferred to abstain from a data sharing relationship. Using the SET framework, we found that customers expected different conditions to be fulfilled by their insurance provider based on the commitment, power, reciprocity, and trust constructs. Of the 452 customers who completed the surveys, 64 (14.2%) customers required that the insurance organization meets their data treatment expectations (commitment). Overall, 4.9% (22/452) of customers were concerned about their health data being used against them to profile their health, to increase insurance prices, or to deny health insurance claims (power). A total of 28.5% (129/452) of customers expected some form of benefit, such as personalized digital health services, and 29.9% (135/452) of customers expected finance-related compensation (reciprocity). Furthermore, 7.5% (34/452) of customers expected some form of empathy from the insurance organization through enhanced transparency or an emotional connection (trust). ConclusionsTo aid in the design and development of digital health services, insurance organizations need to address the customers’ expectations when sharing their health data. We established the expectations of customers in the social exchange of health data and explored the perceived values of data as intangible goods. Actions by the insurance organization should aim to increase trust through a culture of transparency, commitment to treat health data in a prescribed manner, provide reciprocal benefits through digital health services that customers deem valuable, and assuage fears of health data being used to prevent providing insurance coverage or increase costs.
url http://medinform.jmir.org/2020/3/e16102/
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