Peter Bergwall
Affiliated researcher
Exploring Paths of Justice in the Digital Healthcare : A Socio-Legal Study of Swedish Online Doctors
Author
Summary, in English
The aim of this study was to investigate how perceptions of the online doctor service Kry influence the willingness to use said service. This has been achieved through two online surveys conducted in 2016 and 2017, generating two study samples of 1,264 and 882 cases, respectively. Survey items operationalised perceptions of justice as well as benefits and risk beliefs associated with Kry. Statistical modelling was performed, applying PLS path analysis.
Inspired by the meta-theoretical perspective of critical realism, the aim was also to explain the underlying mechanisms that cause online doctors as a Swedish healthcare phenomenon. This has been achieved through a descriptive analysis based on, for instance, legal documents, governmental reports, regional recommendations, statistics, and newspaper articles. The descriptive study has been guided by Alan Norrie’s sociology of law and the theoretical figure of law’s
architectonic, where the legal is always also the ethico-legal, the juridico political, and the socio-legal.
Results from the surveys and the subsequent statistical modelling showed that the willingness to use Kry was predicted by perceptions of distributive justice, i.e., whether the service was perceived as accessible and inclusive (equality), and whether it was perceived as providing value for time and money spent (equity). Furthermore, perceptions of equality and equity were mediated by perceptions of perceived trust and interest in Kry. Perceptions of procedural justice did not impact the willingness to use Kry to the same extent.
The descriptive study showed that Swedish online doctors as a phenomenon has emerged in a health system shaped by ethico-legal, juridico-political, and what I call econo-legal conflicts. Swedish healthcare law is based on the principle stating that those in most need of care should receive care first and on the overarching goal stating that the healthcare should strive towards an equal healthcare for the entire population. With the free choice of care reform, implemented in 2010, the Swedish health system was transformed into a quasi market and the principle of demand, stating that the patient should receive healthcare when she demands it rather than when she needs it, has entered the health system under the label free choice. This ethical and normative ambivalence is found in and expressed through healthcare law.
Unlike the health system at large, online doctors are well equipped for a healthcare that is becoming increasingly consumer-driven. This may explain why distributive justice predict the will to use Kry. Much like the online marketplace
experience, patients are judging the online doctor experience based on value for time and money spent.
Department/s
- Department of Sociology of Law
Publishing year
2021-04-07
Language
English
Publication/Series
Lund Studies in Sociology of Law
Volume
51
Full text
Document type
Dissertation
Publisher
Department of Sociology of Law, Lund University
Topic
- Sociology (excluding Social Work, Social Psychology and Social Anthropology)
- Law and Society
Keywords
- rättssociologi
- ehealth
- critical realism
- distributive justice
- ethical principles in healthcare
- free choice
- healthcare demands
- healthcare law and ethics
- healthcare need
- Kry
- latent variables
- mHealth
- Alan Norrie
- online doctors
- online survey
- PLS path modelling
- PLS-SEM
- privacy calculus
- procedural justice
- retail health
- SmartPLS
- sociology of law
- Swedish healthcare
- telehealth
- quasi-market
Status
Published
Supervisor
- Måns Svensson
- Karl Dahlstrand
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 1403-7246
- ISBN: 978-91-7895-844-3
- ISBN: 978-91-7895-843-6
Defence date
7 May 2021
Defence time
13:00
Defence place
Online, Zoom link: https://lu-se.zoom.us/j/62396798039?pwd=UExWM1RBNFpxRGN3OGZmTlgvRTZEUT09 Passcode: 2020
Opponent
- Bettina Lemann Kristiansen (Professor)