No longer wearing: investigating the abandonment of personal health-tracking technologies on craigslist
Abstract
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UbiComp '15: Proceedings of the 2015 ACM International Joint Conference on Pervasive and Ubiquitous Computing
Personal health-tracking technologies have become a part of mainstream culture. Their growing popularity and widespread adoption present an opportunity for the design of new interventions to improve wellness and health. However, there is an increasing concern that these technologies are failing to inspire long-term adoption. In order to understand why users abandon personal health-tracking technologies, we analyzed advertisements of secondary sales of such technologies on Craigslist. We conducted iterative inductive and deductive analyses of approximately 1600 advertisements of personal health-tracking technologies posted over the course of one month across the US. We identify health motivations and rationales for abandonment and present a set of design implications. We call for improved theories that help translate between existing theories designed to explain psychological effects of health behavior change and the technologies that help people make those changes.
Document Type
Conference Proceeding
Publication Date
9-15-2015
Recommended Citation
Clawson, James; Pater, Jessica PhD; Miller, Andrew D.; Mynatt, Elizabeth; and Mamykina, Lena, "No longer wearing: investigating the abandonment of personal health-tracking technologies on craigslist" (2015). Health Services and Informatics Research. 155.
https://researchrepository.parkviewhealth.org/informatics/155