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Dernière synchronisation le 04/06/2026
Soc Sci Med . 2026;398 :119171
Burnout has become a prevalent topic in both medical and public discourse, yet there remains little consensus on how it should be defined or addressed. Digital mental health technologies, especially mindfulness meditation apps like Headspace, position themselves as accessible responses to this condition. However, research in medical anthropology demonstrate that such technologies do not merely reflect dominant understandings of health, they actively shape health, illness/disease and care practices. Focusing on the mindfulness meditation mobile phone application Headspace, this article shows how the app reframes health as a moral obligation, equating well-being with productivity and "fitness for work." Based on an ethnographic discourse analysis of Headspace's burnout-related content, the analysis demonstrates how burnout is constructed as an individual moral failing, entailing techniques of self-optimization aimed at restoring productive capacity. This study contributes to medical anthropology and digital health studies by revealing how mobile mental health apps encode neoliberal ideals of responsibility, productivity, and affective control into everyday self-care practices. In doing so, it expands critical scholarship on burnout by showing how digital technologies transform subjective experiences of exhaustion into sites of moral evaluation, underscoring the need for closer attention to how digital health platforms shape imaginaries of health, wellbeing, and subjectivity.