Woolf S H, Rothemich S F, Johnson R E, Marsland D W
Department of Family Practice, Medical College of Virginia, Virginia Commonwealth University, 3712 Charles Stewart Dr, Fairfax, VA 22033, USA.
Arch Fam Med. 2000 Nov-Dec;9(10):1111-8. doi: 10.1001/archfami.9.10.1111.
New rulings nationwide require health services researchers to obtain patient consent before examining personally identifiable data. A selection bias may result if consenting patients differ from those who do not give consent.
To compare patients who consent, refuse, and do not answer.
Patients completing an in-office survey were asked for permission to be surveyed at home and for their records to be reviewed. Survey responses and practice billing data were used to compare patients by consent status.
Urban family practice center.
Of 2046 eligible patients, 1106 were randomly selected for the survey, were approached by staff, and agreed to participate. Approximately 87% of the nonparticipants were eliminated through a randomization process.
Consent status.
A total of 33% of patients did not give consent: 25% actively refused, and 8% did not answer. Consenting patients were older, included fewer women and African Americans, and reported poorer physical function than those who did not give consent (P<.05). Patients who did not answer the question were older, included more women and African Americans, and were less educated than those who answered (P<.02). Visits for certain reasons (eg, pelvic infections) were associated with lower consent rates. On multivariate analysis, older age, male sex, and lower functional status were significant predictors of consent.
Patients who release personal information for health services research differ in important characteristics from those who do not. In this study, older patients and those in poorer health were more likely to grant consent. Quality and health services research restricted to patients who give consent may misrepresent outcomes for the general population. Arch Fam Med. 2000;9:1111-1118
全国范围内的新规定要求健康服务研究人员在检查个人可识别数据之前获得患者同意。如果同意参与的患者与不同意的患者存在差异,可能会导致选择偏倚。
比较同意、拒绝和未回应的患者。
要求完成门诊调查的患者允许在家中接受调查并允许查阅其病历。使用调查回复和医疗计费数据按同意状态比较患者。
城市家庭医疗中心。
在2046名符合条件的患者中,随机选择1106名进行调查,工作人员与他们联系,他们同意参与。约87%的未参与者通过随机化过程被排除。
同意状态。
共有33%的患者未给予同意:25%主动拒绝,8%未回应。同意参与的患者年龄较大,女性和非裔美国人较少,且身体功能比未给予同意的患者差(P<0.05)。未回答问题的患者年龄较大,女性和非裔美国人较多,且受教育程度低于回答问题的患者(P<0.02)。因某些原因(如盆腔感染)就诊的患者同意率较低。多因素分析显示,年龄较大、男性和功能状态较差是同意的重要预测因素。
同意为健康服务研究提供个人信息的患者与不同意的患者在重要特征上存在差异。在本研究中,年龄较大和健康状况较差的患者更有可能给予同意。仅限于同意参与的患者的质量和健康服务研究可能会歪曲普通人群的结果。《家庭医学文献》。2000年;9:1111 - 1118