Plantinga Laura, Natowicz Marvin R, Kass Nancy E, Hull Sara Chandros, Gostin Lawrence O, Faden Ruth R
Welch Center for Prevention, Epidemiology and Clinical Research, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Am J Med Genet C Semin Med Genet. 2003 May 15;119C(1):51-9. doi: 10.1002/ajmg.c.10006.
Despite policy attention to medical privacy and patient confidentiality, little empirical work exists documenting and comparing experiences of persons with genetic versus nongenetic medical conditions concerning persons' disclosure to others as well as their views about appropriate confidentiality to and within families. The goal of this cross-sectional interview study with nearly 600 participants was to document and compare the experiences, attitudes, and beliefs of persons with strictly genetic conditions to those of persons with or at risk for other serious medical conditions in terms of the degree to which they have disclosed to others that they have the condition and their views about how others ought to maintain the confidentiality of that information. While almost all participants reported that family members knew about their condition, results suggest participants want to control that disclosure themselves and do not want doctors to disclose information to family members without their knowledge. Similarly, participants do not think family members should be able to get information about them without their knowledge but feel overwhelmingly that it is a person's responsibility to disclose information about hereditary conditions to other family members. Ambivalence about confidentiality was evident: while most participants did not mind doctors sharing information with other doctors when it was for their benefit, the majority also felt that doctors should be punished for releasing information without their permission. The views and experiences reported here generally did not differ by whether participants had genetic versus nongenetic conditions, suggesting that the extensive policy focus on genetic information may be unwarranted.
尽管政策关注医疗隐私和患者保密问题,但很少有实证研究记录和比较患有遗传性疾病与非遗传性疾病的患者在向他人披露病情以及他们对家庭内部适当保密的看法方面的经历。这项对近600名参与者进行的横断面访谈研究的目的是记录和比较患有严格意义上遗传性疾病的人与患有其他严重疾病或有患其他严重疾病风险的人在向他人披露病情的程度以及他们对他人应如何保密该信息的看法方面的经历、态度和信念。虽然几乎所有参与者都表示家庭成员知道他们的病情,但结果表明参与者希望自己控制这种披露,并且不希望医生在他们不知情的情况下向家庭成员披露信息。同样,参与者认为家庭成员不应该在他们不知情的情况下获取关于他们的信息,但绝大多数人认为向其他家庭成员披露遗传疾病信息是个人的责任。对保密的矛盾态度很明显:虽然大多数参与者不介意医生为了他们的利益与其他医生分享信息,但大多数人也认为医生未经他们许可发布信息应该受到惩罚。这里报告的观点和经历一般不因参与者患有遗传性疾病还是非遗传性疾病而有所不同,这表明政策对遗传信息的广泛关注可能是没有必要的。