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. 2023 Feb 6;5:1069410. doi: 10.3389/fdgth.2023.1069410

Table 2.

Stakeholder archetypes defined by participants*.

Archetypes defined by participants Description Example organizations
1. Innovators Develop ready-to-use digital health solutions
 a) Incumbent innovators Established health companies driving digital health (e.g., Health insurance, pharma, med-tech) Universities, med-tech, pharma companies, agencies and consultancies, research consortia, patient advocates / organisations, university spin-offs
 b) Disruptors BigTech companies (e.g., Apple) or start-ups venturing into digital health Start-ups, FAAMG (Facebook, Apple, Amazon, Microsoft, Goolge), IT providers (e.g., cloud, platforms), Covid
2. Regulators & policy makers Approve and regulate digital healthcare solutions
 a) National regulators & policy makers National insitutions regulating or affecting digital health innovation in Switzerland MPs, Swissmedic, BAG, Federal Statistical Office, EDÖB, local health authorities, BIT, local governments
 b) International agencies International bodies with high impact on digital health innovation in Switzerland European Medicines Agency (EMA), Food and Drug Authority (FDA), International NGOs, “supra-nationals” (e.g., WHO, European Commission)
3. Providors & implementors Deliver or enable delivery of digital healthcare to patients, oftentimes required to implement innovation Hospitals, patients, insurers, GPs & other health providers, pharma companies, healthy adopters, hospital physiciancs, health care professionals, governments (e.g., implementing COVID tracking)
4. Opposers Oppose and critique digital health innovations Data subjects (e.g., patients, citizens), incumbents due to loose to digital health, corporations (esp. legal, compliance division)
5. End-users Use or receive digital health solutions, often receiving a benefit as a result Patients, doctors
6. Other Engage otherwise in the evolution of the digital health eco-system General public, overall education system

Participants identified stakeholder archetypes as part of section 2 of the mind map.

*

Note: archetypes are non-exclusive categorizations. As such, Individual stakeholders, i.e., hybrid-stakeholders, may fall under several archetypes simultaneously (e.g., health insurers may innovate).