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Supportive fintech for individuals with bipolar disorder: financial data sharing preferences for longitudinal care management

Supportive fintech for individuals with bipolar disorder: financial data sharing preferences for longitudinal care management
Supportive fintech for individuals with bipolar disorder: financial data sharing preferences for longitudinal care management
Financial stability is a key challenge for individuals living with bipolar disorder (BD). Symptomatic periods in BD are associated with poor financial decision-making, contributing to a negative cycle of worsening symptoms and an increased risk of bankruptcy. There has been an increased focus on designing supportive financial technologies (fintech) to address varying and intermittent needs across different stages of BD. However, little is known about this population’s expectations and privacy preferences related to financial data sharing for longitudinal care management. To address this knowledge gap, we have deployed a factorial vignette survey using the Contextual Integrity framework. Our data from individuals with BD (N=480) shows that they are open to sharing financial data for long term care management. We have also identified significant differences in sharing preferences across age, gender, and diagnostic subtype. We discuss the implications of these findings in designing equitable fintech to support this marginalized community.
Bipolar Disorder, Financial Technology
Brozena, Jeff
f173e003-c4df-48ce-91ae-609fd61e03fd
Blair, Johnna
ad4365f5-9218-45a5-8412-0033854caf10
Richardson, Thomas
f8d84122-b061-4322-a594-5ef2eb5cad0d
Matthews, Mark
52d16917-bc56-40dc-8ca7-d33240182289
Muherjee, Dahlia
e4bce556-3d6f-4ee4-b33c-3f977347b923
Saunders, Erika
71c86362-6926-4b2b-a8a2-07bb7617b4fa
Abdullah, Saeed
26ffa1c2-fdd4-492d-b389-965b24185335
Floyd Mueller, Florian
Kyburz, Penny
Brozena, Jeff
f173e003-c4df-48ce-91ae-609fd61e03fd
Blair, Johnna
ad4365f5-9218-45a5-8412-0033854caf10
Richardson, Thomas
f8d84122-b061-4322-a594-5ef2eb5cad0d
Matthews, Mark
52d16917-bc56-40dc-8ca7-d33240182289
Muherjee, Dahlia
e4bce556-3d6f-4ee4-b33c-3f977347b923
Saunders, Erika
71c86362-6926-4b2b-a8a2-07bb7617b4fa
Abdullah, Saeed
26ffa1c2-fdd4-492d-b389-965b24185335
Floyd Mueller, Florian
Kyburz, Penny

Brozena, Jeff, Blair, Johnna, Richardson, Thomas, Matthews, Mark, Muherjee, Dahlia, Saunders, Erika and Abdullah, Saeed (2024) Supportive fintech for individuals with bipolar disorder: financial data sharing preferences for longitudinal care management. Floyd Mueller, Florian and Kyburz, Penny (eds.) In CHI '24: Proceedings of the CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. 15 pp . (doi:10.1145/3613904.3642645).

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)

Abstract

Financial stability is a key challenge for individuals living with bipolar disorder (BD). Symptomatic periods in BD are associated with poor financial decision-making, contributing to a negative cycle of worsening symptoms and an increased risk of bankruptcy. There has been an increased focus on designing supportive financial technologies (fintech) to address varying and intermittent needs across different stages of BD. However, little is known about this population’s expectations and privacy preferences related to financial data sharing for longitudinal care management. To address this knowledge gap, we have deployed a factorial vignette survey using the Contextual Integrity framework. Our data from individuals with BD (N=480) shows that they are open to sharing financial data for long term care management. We have also identified significant differences in sharing preferences across age, gender, and diagnostic subtype. We discuss the implications of these findings in designing equitable fintech to support this marginalized community.

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Brozen et al (2024)- Supportive fin tech for Bipolar - Version of Record
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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 11 May 2024
Keywords: Bipolar Disorder, Financial Technology

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 493623
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493623
PURE UUID: 6ee9ed60-955f-4406-bfdd-b0262adc412a
ORCID for Thomas Richardson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5357-4281

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Date deposited: 09 Sep 2024 16:53
Last modified: 18 Sep 2024 02:00

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Contributors

Author: Jeff Brozena
Author: Johnna Blair
Author: Mark Matthews
Author: Dahlia Muherjee
Author: Erika Saunders
Author: Saeed Abdullah
Editor: Florian Floyd Mueller
Editor: Penny Kyburz

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