Title
Personal Information and Public Health: Design Tensions in Sharing and Monitoring Wellbeing in Pregnancy
Abstract
•Sharing personal data in public health is very different from the closed-circle of personal data use.•Sharing data has both pragmatic (time, workload etc.) and psychosocial (confidence, competence, connectedness etc.) implications for care.•Health professionals must balance care for the individual against the wellbeing of the patient population.•Women prefer reflective and conversational, rather than directive or transactional, feedback.•Designers are advised to focus on strategies to support negotiation, navigate uncertainty, and realise a shared practice of wellbeing.
Year
DOI
Venue
2020
10.1016/j.ijhcs.2019.102373
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
Keywords
Field
DocType
Wellbeing,Mental health,Pregnancy,Self report,Data sharing,Perinatal depression,Midwifery,Engagement,Disclosure
Mobile technology,Public health,Public relations,Computer science,Pregnancy,Knowledge management,Personally identifiable information,Mental health,Data management
Journal
Volume
ISSN
Citations 
135
1071-5819
1
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.48
0
6
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Kevin Doherty1378.95
Marguerite Barry242.54
Jose Marcano Belisario341.20
Cecily Morrison47113.56
Josip Car541.20
Gavin Doherty636142.18