Public health research using cell phone derived mobility data in sub-Saharan Africa: Ethical issues
Date
2023
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Ethics of mobility data in sub-Saharan Africa
Abstract
The movements of humans have a significant impact on population health. While studies of such
movements are as old as public health itself, the COVID-19 pandemic has raised the profile of mobility
research using digital technologies to track transmission routes and calculate the effects of health policies,
such as lockdowns. In sub-Saharan Africa, the high prevalence of cell phone and smartphone use is
a source of potentially valuable mobility data for public health purposes. Researchers can access call
data records, passively collected in real time from millions of clients by cell phone companies, and
associate these records with other data sets to generate insights, make predictions or draw possible policy
implications. The use of mobility data from this source could have a range of significant benefits for society,
from better control of infectious diseases, improved city planning, more efficient transportation systems
and the optimisation of health resources. We discuss key ethical issues raised by public health studies
using mobility data from cell phones in sub-Saharan Africa and identify six key ethical challenge areas:
autonomy, including consent and individual or group privacy; bias and representativeness; community
awareness, engagement and trust; function creep and accountability; stakeholder relationships and
power dynamics; and the translation of mobility analyses into health policy. We emphasise the ethical
importance of narrowing knowledge gaps between researchers, policymakers and the general public.
Given that individuals do not really provide valid consent for the research use of phone data tracking their
movements, community understanding and input will be crucial to the maintenance of public trust.
Description
Research Article
Keywords
ethics, mobility data, public health, community engagement, surveillance
Citation
HOW TO CITE: Rennie S, Atuire C, Mtande T, Jaoko W, Litewka S, Juengst E, et al. Public health research using cell phone derived mobility data in sub-Saharan Africa: Ethical issues. S Afr J Sci. 2023;119(5/6), Art. #14777. https:// doi.org/10.17159/sajs.2023/14777