Living Data: Making Sense of Health Biosensing

Celia Mary Roberts, Adrian Mackenzie, Maggie Mort, Mette Kragh-Furbo, Joann Wilkinson, Theresa Atkinson

Research output: Book/ReportBookpeer-review

Abstract

This book critiques the popular claim that 'more information' equates to 'better health' and explores the potential challenges related to people's changing relationships with traditional health systems as access to, and control over data shifts.

Biosensors and biosensing practices collect and share living data, data concerning changes in body states. Health biosensing emerges where devices, health experience, scientific and medical knowledges and online platforms meet around bodies. This book contrasts forms of health biosensing in significant life events ranging from conception to ageing. It explores practicalities, histories and promises of fertility and hormonal biosensing, stress biosensing, DNA genotyping platforms, and old-age biosensing. While the biosensing industries promote promise-horizons of the ‘soon’, ethnographic stories of failure and disappointment abound. ‘Living data’ may be about health for many people, but still happens mostly outside biomedicine or clinical practice. Yet biosensing has the potential to change human bodies and lives in barely imagined ways. This book argues for thinking about biosensing platforms and bodies together to understand that potential and to recognise harms and limitations.
Original languageEnglish
Place of PublicationBristol
PublisherBristol University Press
Number of pages208
ISBN (Electronic)9781529207538, 9781529207514
ISBN (Print)9781447348665, 9781529207507
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 24 Jul 2019

Keywords

  • Health Biosensing
  • biosensors
  • bodies
  • platforms
  • self-monitoring
  • self-tracking
  • data

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Living Data: Making Sense of Health Biosensing'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this