From the Examination Room to Cyberspace: The Story Behind "Cyberspatial Privacy in the Digital Age"
Published in Computational Sciences and Philosophy & Religion
Where It Began: A Medical Student's Discomfort
My interest in patient privacy did not begin in a philosophy seminar. It began in the clinic, with a feeling of unease I could not yet name.
As a medical student, I was struck by how casually private information circulated—between students, between floors, between departments. I began researching the dilemmas that medical students face: when do you speak, when do you stay silent, and who does the information belong to in the first place? That research became my first formal presentation on patient privacy, and it planted a seed that took years to fully grow.
Shortly after, I had the opportunity to co-edit what became the first Turkish-language book dedicated to patient privacy. It was a formative experience, and not only because of the subject matter. As we worked through the chapters, I noticed something troubling: the authors—clinicians, lawyers, ethicists—were struggling to frame privacy consistently. They had no shared vocabulary for classifying breaches. They could not easily distinguish between what happened when a patient's record was left on a screen versus when their data was silently transferred to a third-party analytics platform. The categories available to them—public versus private, disclosed versus undisclosed—were simply too blunt. Digital care had already moved faster than the conceptual tools used to think about it.
A Problem Left to Brew
During my doctoral years, I wrote an essay exploring this gap more systematically. I had become fascinated by Edward T. Hall's proxemics—his theory of how human beings organize space and proximity in social interaction—and I began to wonder whether its logic could be extended into digital environments. The intimate zone, the personal zone, the social, the public: these were not just spatial categories but normative ones, encoding what we expect others to see, hear, and know about us. Could cyberspace be mapped onto such a gradient?
The essay was promising but preliminary. My doctorate was focused on AI and clinical decision-making, and privacy was a companion concern rather than the central one. So I did something that I think is underappreciated in academic life: I left the idea to mature. I defended my thesis, caught my breath, and returned to the problem when I could give it the attention it deserved.
Finding a Collaborator, Building a Framework
The return was not solitary. My friend and colleague Ebubekir M. Deniz joined me, and together we moved from intuition to argument. What had been a preliminary sketch became a structured theoretical framework. The key move was introducing what we call cyberspatial privacy not as a separate category to be added onto existing models, but as a transversal dimension—a layer that permeates and reshapes all four of Hall's spatial zones simultaneously.
This distinction matters. Existing privacy literature tends to treat digital privacy as something that happens in a distinct domain, governed by separate rules. But that is not how patients actually experience it. When a woman undergoes a gynecological examination and leaves wearing a biometric monitoring device, she does not step out of intimate privacy into some other kind. The intimate zone follows her—but it is now also a cyberspatial zone, with entirely different vulnerabilities. Her heart rhythm data, encrypted or not, sits on a server. Her genetic results, consented to under vague research clauses, may quietly inform insurance risk models she will never see. The spatial logic of the clinic and the algorithmic logic of digital infrastructure are not separate; they are entangled.
To make this concrete, we developed the case of Patient X: a 35-year-old woman receiving hybrid gynecological care. Her journey through the framework traces how privacy risks accumulate and differ across zones—from the bodily intimacy of the examination room to the distributed exposure of cloud-stored wearable data, from a telemedicine consultation in the relative privacy of her home to the institutional data breach that may eventually expose her records without her knowledge or consent. Patient X is hypothetical, but her situation is not. Everything in her story has happened, is happening, to real patients in real healthcare systems.
Why Classical Theories Fall Short
One of the harder intellectual tasks in writing this paper was being fair to the frameworks we were critiquing. Westin, Altman, Petronio, Nissenbaum—these are foundational thinkers, and their contributions remain indispensable. But they were built for a world of bounded contexts, identifiable agents, and deliberate disclosure. In digital health environments, none of those conditions reliably hold. Data collection is continuous and automated. Consent is often captured in broad, ambiguous forms. Context collapses: information shared within a clinical relationship migrates, without the patient's awareness, into commercial and institutional domains that carry none of the relational norms of medicine.
What these theories lack is not empirical detail but spatial and relational granularity—a way of thinking about how exposure differs in kind and ethical weight depending on where in the spectrum of proximity it occurs. A breach of intimate biometric data is not the same, morally or practically, as the incidental visibility of a public-facing appointment list. Current frameworks give us few tools to articulate that difference rigorously.
What the Framework Offers
The proxemics-based model we propose is not a replacement for prior theory but a corrective lens. It allows clinicians to think about privacy not only as a legal compliance question but as a relational and spatial one. It gives system designers a structured basis for layered security protocols—stricter and more persistent protections for intimate-zone data, greater transparency mechanisms at the social and public levels. It gives policymakers a normative infrastructure for zone-sensitive regulation that moves beyond the abstraction of principles like "data minimization" toward something more operationally specific.
Perhaps most importantly, the framework reframes what privacy actually is. Not a right to secrecy. Not a transactional commodity managed through one-time consent. But a spatio-ethical relation—something that must be maintained, dynamically, across shifting proximities and digital mediations. In a healthcare system that increasingly collects, processes, and shares patient data at scales and speeds no patient can meaningfully oversee, that reframing is not only conceptually useful. It is morally necessary.
Looking Ahead
This paper is a beginning, not an endpoint. The framework needs empirical testing across different clinical contexts and healthcare systems. It needs to be stress-tested against edge cases—non-Western notions of privacy, collective rather than individual data subjects, the specific vulnerabilities of pediatric or geriatric patients in digital care. And it needs to be translated into practical tools: privacy dashboards, design guidelines, training curricula for clinicians who must navigate these questions daily.
The question I first encountered as a medical student—whose information is this, and what do we owe the person it belongs to?—has only become more urgent. The digital clinic has not made privacy simpler. It has made it more complex, more consequential, and more in need of careful thought. This paper was out contribution to that thinking. I hope it is useful to others doing the same work.
Follow the Topic
-
BMC Medical Ethics
This journal is an open access journal publishing original peer-reviewed research articles in relation to the ethical aspects of biomedical research and clinical practice, including professional choices and conduct, medical technologies, healthcare systems and health policies.
Related Collections
With Collections, you can get published faster and increase your visibility.
Genomic research and ethical considerations
The intersection of genomic research and ethical considerations presents a rich field of inquiry that is increasingly relevant in today's scientific landscape. As advancements in technologies such as CRISPR and genome editing have accelerated, the ability to manipulate genetic material has raised critical ethical questions surrounding gene privacy, informed consent, and the potential consequences of genetic modifications.
Addressing the ethical dimensions of genomic research is essential as society navigates the implications of genetic testing and information. Recent developments in gene editing technologies have not only transformed therapeutic possibilities but have also highlighted the need for robust ethical frameworks to guide their application. Discussions surrounding equity in access to genomic technologies, risks of discrimination based on genetic information, and ethics surrounding privacy of genetic data are vital to ensure that advancements are made with consideration for all stakeholders involved. Facilitating dialogues among scientists, ethicists, policymakers, the public, and fostering a collaborative approach to addressing ethical dilemmas in genomic research is essential.
BMC Medical Ethics is calling for submissions to our Collection, Genomic research and ethical considerations. This Collection aims to explore these complexities and the ethical implications that arise from our growing capabilities in understanding and manipulating the human genome. We welcome research that addresses the ethical considerations surrounding genomic advancements and their implications for society. Key topics of interest for submission include, but are not limited to:
Ethical implications of CRISPR technology
Gene privacy and data protection
Informed consent in genetic testing
The role of bioethics in genomic research
Equity in access to genetic modification technologies
All manuscripts submitted to this journal, including those submitted to collections and special issues, are assessed in line with our editorial policies and the journal’s peer review process. Reviewers and editors are required to declare competing interests and can be excluded from the peer review process if a competing interest exists.
Publishing Model: Open Access
Deadline: May 22, 2026
Pediatric ethics
Pediatric ethics encompasses the complex moral considerations that arise in the healthcare of children, a population that requires special considerations due to their developmental, emotional, and social needs. As healthcare providers navigate the intricacies of medical decision-making for minors, ethical dilemmas frequently arise, particularly concerning parental authority, child autonomy, and the balance between beneficence and respect for the child's emerging independence.
The significance of research in pediatric ethics is underscored by the evolving landscape of child healthcare, where advances in medical technology and treatment options present new ethical challenges. Recent discussions have illuminated the importance of involving children in healthcare decisions appropriate to their maturity level, emphasizing the role of informed consent and assent. Continued exploration in pediatric ethics holds promise for developing more refined ethical guidelines that can adapt to the ever-changing healthcare environment. Future research may lead to improved frameworks for decision-making that incorporate the voices of children, parents, and healthcare providers alike, fostering collaborative approaches that respect the rights of minors while ensuring their well-being.
BMC Medical Ethics is calling for submissions to our Collection, Pediatric ethics. This Collection aims to explore these multifaceted ethical issues, promoting a deeper understanding of pediatric ethics in various clinical contexts. Key topics of interest for submission include, but are not limited to:
Ethical dilemmas in pediatrics
Parental authority vs. pediatric autonomy
Consent in children and adolescents
Ethics in neonatal care
End-of-life care for pediatric patients
This Collection supports and amplifies research related to SDG 3: Good Health and Well-being and SDG 10: Reduced Inequalities.
All manuscripts submitted to this journal, including those submitted to collections and special issues, are assessed in line with our editorial policies and the journal’s peer review process. Reviewers and editors are required to declare competing interests and can be excluded from the peer review process if a competing interest exists.
Publishing Model: Open Access
Deadline: Jun 02, 2026
Please sign in or register for FREE
If you are a registered user on Research Communities by Springer Nature, please sign in