Willison Donald J, Schwartz Lisa, Abelson Julia, Charles Cathy, Swinton Marilyn, Northrup David, Thabane Lehana
Centre for Evaluation of Medicines, St. Joseph's Healthcare, 105 Main Street East, P1, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2007 Nov-Dec;14(6):706-12. doi: 10.1197/jamia.M2457. Epub 2007 Aug 21.
This study sought to determine public opinion on alternatives to project-specific consent for use of their personal information for health research.
The authors conducted a fixed-response random-digit dialed telephone survey of 1,230 adults across Canada.
We measured attitudes toward privacy and health research; trust in different institutions to keep information confidential; and consent choice for research use of one's own health information involving medical record review, automated abstraction of information from the electronic medical record, and linking education or income with health data.
Support was strong for both health research and privacy protection. Studying communicable diseases and quality of health care had greatest support (85% to 89%). Trust was highest for data institutes, university researchers, hospitals, and disease foundations (78% to 80%). Four percent of respondents thought information from their paper medical record should not be used at all for research, 32% thought permission should be obtained for each use, 29% supported broad consent, 24% supported notification and opt out, and 11% felt no need for notification or consent. Opinions were more polarized for automated abstraction of data from the electronic medical record. Respondents were more willing to link education with health data than income.
Most of the public supported alternatives to study-specific consent, but few supported use without any notification or consent. Consent choices for research use of one's health information should be documented in the medical record. The challenge remains how best to elicit those choices and ensure that they are up-to-date.
本研究旨在确定公众对于在健康研究中使用其个人信息时,针对特定项目同意的替代方案的看法。
作者对加拿大全国1230名成年人进行了固定应答随机数字拨号电话调查。
我们测量了对隐私和健康研究的态度;对不同机构保密信息的信任度;以及对于使用个人健康信息进行研究的同意选择,包括病历审查、从电子病历中自动提取信息,以及将教育或收入与健康数据相联系。
对健康研究和隐私保护均有强烈支持。对研究传染病和医疗保健质量的支持度最高(85%至89%)。对数据机构、大学研究人员、医院和疾病基金会的信任度最高(78%至80%)。4% 的受访者认为其纸质病历中的信息完全不应被用于研究,32% 认为每次使用都应获得许可,29% 支持广泛同意,24% 支持通知并可选择退出,11% 觉得无需通知或同意。对于从电子病历中自动提取数据的意见分歧更大。受访者更愿意将教育与健康数据相联系,而非收入。
大多数公众支持针对特定研究同意的替代方案,但很少有人支持在没有任何通知或同意的情况下使用。使用个人健康信息进行研究的同意选择应记录在病历中。挑战仍然在于如何最好地引出这些选择并确保其是最新的。