The roles of trust in government and sense of community in the COVID-19 contact tracing privacy calculus: mixed method study using a 2-wave survey and in-depth interviews

Background: Contact tracing technology has been adopted in many countries to aid in identifying, evaluating, and handling individuals who have had contact with those infected with COVID-19. Singapore was among the countries that actively implemented the government-led contact tracing program known a...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kang, Hyunjin, Lee, Jeong Kyu, Lee, Edmund Wei Jian, Toh, Cindy
Other Authors: Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/175621
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-175621
record_format dspace
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social Sciences
Contact tracing technology
Privacy calculus
spellingShingle Social Sciences
Contact tracing technology
Privacy calculus
Kang, Hyunjin
Lee, Jeong Kyu
Lee, Edmund Wei Jian
Toh, Cindy
The roles of trust in government and sense of community in the COVID-19 contact tracing privacy calculus: mixed method study using a 2-wave survey and in-depth interviews
description Background: Contact tracing technology has been adopted in many countries to aid in identifying, evaluating, and handling individuals who have had contact with those infected with COVID-19. Singapore was among the countries that actively implemented the government-led contact tracing program known as TraceTogether. Despite the benefits the contact tracing program could provide to individuals and the community, privacy issues were a significant barrier to individuals’ acceptance of the program. Objective: Building on the privacy calculus model, this study investigates how the perceptions of the 2 key groups (ie, government and community members) involved in the digital contact tracing factor into individuals’ privacy calculus of digital contact tracing. Methods: Using a mixed method approach, we conducted (1) a 2-wave survey (n=674) and (2) in-depth interviews (n=12) with TraceTogether users in Singapore. Using structural equation modeling, this study investigated how trust in the government and the sense of community exhibited by individuals during the early stage of implementation (time 1) predicted privacy concerns, perceived benefits, and future use intentions, measured after the program was fully implemented (time 2). Expanding on the survey results, this study conducted one-on-one interviews to gain in-depth insights into the privacy considerations involved in digital contact tracing. Results: The results from the survey showed that trust in the government increased perceived benefits while decreasing privacy concerns regarding the use of TraceTogether. Furthermore, individuals who felt a connection to community members by participating in the program (ie, the sense of community) were more inclined to believe in its benefits. The sense of community also played a moderating role in the influence of government trust on perceived benefits. Follow-up in-depth interviews highlighted that having a sense of control over information and transparency in the government’s data management were crucial factors in privacy considerations. The interviews also highlighted surveillance as the most prevalent aspect of privacy concerns regarding TraceTogether use. In addition, our findings revealed that trust in the government, particularly the perceived transparency of government actions, was most strongly associated with concerns regarding the secondary use of data. Conclusions: Using a mixed method approach involving a 2-wave survey and in-depth interview data, we expanded our understanding of privacy decisions and the privacy calculus in the context of digital contact tracing. The opposite influences of privacy concerns and perceived benefit on use intention suggest that the privacy calculus in TraceTogether might be viewed as a rational process of weighing between privacy risks and use benefits to make an uptake decision. However, our study demonstrated that existing perceptions toward the provider and the government in the contact tracing context, as well as the perception of the community triggered by TraceTogether use, may bias user appraisals of privacy risks and the benefits of contact tracing.
author2 Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information
author_facet Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information
Kang, Hyunjin
Lee, Jeong Kyu
Lee, Edmund Wei Jian
Toh, Cindy
format Article
author Kang, Hyunjin
Lee, Jeong Kyu
Lee, Edmund Wei Jian
Toh, Cindy
author_sort Kang, Hyunjin
title The roles of trust in government and sense of community in the COVID-19 contact tracing privacy calculus: mixed method study using a 2-wave survey and in-depth interviews
title_short The roles of trust in government and sense of community in the COVID-19 contact tracing privacy calculus: mixed method study using a 2-wave survey and in-depth interviews
title_full The roles of trust in government and sense of community in the COVID-19 contact tracing privacy calculus: mixed method study using a 2-wave survey and in-depth interviews
title_fullStr The roles of trust in government and sense of community in the COVID-19 contact tracing privacy calculus: mixed method study using a 2-wave survey and in-depth interviews
title_full_unstemmed The roles of trust in government and sense of community in the COVID-19 contact tracing privacy calculus: mixed method study using a 2-wave survey and in-depth interviews
title_sort roles of trust in government and sense of community in the covid-19 contact tracing privacy calculus: mixed method study using a 2-wave survey and in-depth interviews
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/175621
_version_ 1800916382030757888
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1756212024-05-05T15:34:12Z The roles of trust in government and sense of community in the COVID-19 contact tracing privacy calculus: mixed method study using a 2-wave survey and in-depth interviews Kang, Hyunjin Lee, Jeong Kyu Lee, Edmund Wei Jian Toh, Cindy Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information Social Sciences Contact tracing technology Privacy calculus Background: Contact tracing technology has been adopted in many countries to aid in identifying, evaluating, and handling individuals who have had contact with those infected with COVID-19. Singapore was among the countries that actively implemented the government-led contact tracing program known as TraceTogether. Despite the benefits the contact tracing program could provide to individuals and the community, privacy issues were a significant barrier to individuals’ acceptance of the program. Objective: Building on the privacy calculus model, this study investigates how the perceptions of the 2 key groups (ie, government and community members) involved in the digital contact tracing factor into individuals’ privacy calculus of digital contact tracing. Methods: Using a mixed method approach, we conducted (1) a 2-wave survey (n=674) and (2) in-depth interviews (n=12) with TraceTogether users in Singapore. Using structural equation modeling, this study investigated how trust in the government and the sense of community exhibited by individuals during the early stage of implementation (time 1) predicted privacy concerns, perceived benefits, and future use intentions, measured after the program was fully implemented (time 2). Expanding on the survey results, this study conducted one-on-one interviews to gain in-depth insights into the privacy considerations involved in digital contact tracing. Results: The results from the survey showed that trust in the government increased perceived benefits while decreasing privacy concerns regarding the use of TraceTogether. Furthermore, individuals who felt a connection to community members by participating in the program (ie, the sense of community) were more inclined to believe in its benefits. The sense of community also played a moderating role in the influence of government trust on perceived benefits. Follow-up in-depth interviews highlighted that having a sense of control over information and transparency in the government’s data management were crucial factors in privacy considerations. The interviews also highlighted surveillance as the most prevalent aspect of privacy concerns regarding TraceTogether use. In addition, our findings revealed that trust in the government, particularly the perceived transparency of government actions, was most strongly associated with concerns regarding the secondary use of data. Conclusions: Using a mixed method approach involving a 2-wave survey and in-depth interview data, we expanded our understanding of privacy decisions and the privacy calculus in the context of digital contact tracing. The opposite influences of privacy concerns and perceived benefit on use intention suggest that the privacy calculus in TraceTogether might be viewed as a rational process of weighing between privacy risks and use benefits to make an uptake decision. However, our study demonstrated that existing perceptions toward the provider and the government in the contact tracing context, as well as the perception of the community triggered by TraceTogether use, may bias user appraisals of privacy risks and the benefits of contact tracing. Published version 2024-04-30T07:50:37Z 2024-04-30T07:50:37Z 2024 Journal Article Kang, H., Lee, J. K., Lee, E. W. J. & Toh, C. (2024). The roles of trust in government and sense of community in the COVID-19 contact tracing privacy calculus: mixed method study using a 2-wave survey and in-depth interviews. JMIR MHealth and UHealth, 12(1), e48986-. https://dx.doi.org/10.2196/48986 2291-5222 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/175621 10.2196/48986 38451602 2-s2.0-85187202427 1 12 e48986 en JMIR mHealth and uHealth © Hyunjin Kang, Jeong Kyu Lee, Edmund WJ Lee, Cindy Toh. Originally published in JMIR mHealth and uHealth (https://mhealth.jmir.org), 07.03.2024. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in JMIR mHealth and uHealth, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on https://mhealth.jmir.org/, as well as this copyright and license information must be included. application/pdf