Grundstrom Casandra, Korhonen Olli, Väyrynen Karin, Isomursu Minna
Faculty of Information Technology and Electrical Engineering, University of Oulu, Oulu, Finland.
JMIR Med Inform. 2020 Mar 26;8(3):e16102. doi: 10.2196/16102.
Insurance 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.
This 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.
A 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.
From 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).
To 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.
保险机构是医疗保健生态系统中的重要利益相关者。为满足未来的医疗保健需求,保险公司需要获取健康数据,以便为客户提供预防性和前瞻性的数字健康服务。然而,现有研究在考察激励健康数据共享的条件方面较为有限。
本研究旨在(1)确定保险客户在共享健康数据时的期望,(2)确定健康数据的感知内在价值,以及(3)探索有助于在保险机构与其客户的关系中激励健康数据共享的条件。
通过电子邮件向芬兰一家保险机构随机挑选的客户发放了基于网络的调查问卷。通过归纳编码进行定性数据分析时使用了单个开放式文本答案,随后进行了主题分析。此外,社会交换理论(SET)中的承诺、权力、互惠和信任这4个构念被用作一个框架。
在受邀参与的5000名客户中,我们收到了452份调查问卷(回复率:9.0%)。发现客户特征反映了客户人口统计学情况。在这452份调查问卷中,有48份(10.6%)开放式文本回复被客户跳过,57名(12.6%)客户对共享健康数据没有期望,44名(9.7%)客户倾向于不建立数据共享关系。使用SET框架,我们发现客户基于承诺、权力、互惠和信任构念期望其保险提供商满足不同条件。在完成调查问卷的452名客户中,64名(14.2%)客户要求保险机构满足他们的数据处理期望(承诺)。总体而言,4.9%(22/452)的客户担心他们的健康数据被用于对其健康状况进行分析、提高保险价格或拒绝医疗保险理赔(权力)。共有28.5%(129/452)的客户期望获得某种形式的益处,例如个性化数字健康服务,29.9%(135/452)的客户期望获得与财务相关的补偿(互惠)。此外,7.5%(34/452)的客户期望保险机构通过提高透明度或建立情感联系来给予某种形式的同理心(信任)。
为帮助设计和开发数字健康服务,保险机构在共享客户健康数据时需要满足客户的期望。我们确定了客户在健康数据社会交换中的期望,并探索了数据作为无形商品的感知价值。保险机构的行动应旨在通过透明文化增强信任,承诺以规定方式处理健康数据,通过客户认为有价值的数字健康服务提供互惠利益,并缓解对健康数据被用于拒绝提供保险或提高成本的担忧。