Book contents
- AI in eHealth
- Cambridge Bioethics and Law
- AI in eHealth
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface
- Acronyms
- 1 Mapping the Digital Healthcare Revolution
- Part I Platforms, Apps and Digital Health
- 2 Technology-Driven Disruption of Healthcare and ‘UI Layer’ Privacy-by-Design
- 3 Social Media Platforms as Public Health Arbiters
- 4 Promoting the Use of PHR by Citizens and Physicians
- Part II Trust and Design
- Part III Knowledge, Risk and Control
- Part IV Balancing Regulation, Innovation and Ethics
- Index
- Cambridge Bioethics and Law
- References
3 - Social Media Platforms as Public Health Arbiters
Global Ethical Considerations on Privacy, Legal, and Cultural Issues Associated with Suicide Detection Algorithms
from Part I - Platforms, Apps and Digital Health
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 September 2022
- AI in eHealth
- Cambridge Bioethics and Law
- AI in eHealth
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface
- Acronyms
- 1 Mapping the Digital Healthcare Revolution
- Part I Platforms, Apps and Digital Health
- 2 Technology-Driven Disruption of Healthcare and ‘UI Layer’ Privacy-by-Design
- 3 Social Media Platforms as Public Health Arbiters
- 4 Promoting the Use of PHR by Citizens and Physicians
- Part II Trust and Design
- Part III Knowledge, Risk and Control
- Part IV Balancing Regulation, Innovation and Ethics
- Index
- Cambridge Bioethics and Law
- References
Summary
The emergence of Facebook’s suicide prevention algorithm has prompted discussion around whether social media platforms have a role to play in public health surveillance. Concerns have been raised about an entity that is not a public interest health authority collecting and acting on the private health information of its users, particularly sensitive data like an individual’s mental health status. Mental illnesses are still heavily stigmatised, despite continued efforts to normalise these conditions in some regions of the world. Depending on a user’s geographic location, the ramifications of the suicide detection algorithms generating false positives for suicide risk could have severe consequences. The present chapter continues this discourse by examining the ethical implications of Facebook’s suicide prevention algorithm from the privacy, legal, and cultural perspectives.
Keywords
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- AI in eHealthHuman Autonomy, Data Governance and Privacy in Healthcare, pp. 68 - 86Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022