Bond Carol S, Ahmed Osman Hassan, Hind Martin, Thomas Bronwen, Hewitt-Taylor Jaqui
School of Health and Social Care, Bournemouth University, Bournemouth, United Kingdom.
J Med Internet Res. 2013 Jun 7;15(6):e112. doi: 10.2196/jmir.2435.
Increasing numbers of people living with a long-term health condition are putting personal health information online, including on discussion boards. Many discussion boards contain material of potential use to researchers; however, it is unclear how this information can and should be used by researchers. To date there has been no evaluation of the views of those individuals sharing health information online regarding the use of their shared information for research purposes.
To explore the views of contributors to online diabetes discussion boards with regards to if (and how) they feel their contributions to boards should be used by health researchers.
A qualitative approach was employed using online semistructured asynchronous (email) interviews. Interpretative description methodology was used to assess the interview transcripts, and quotations were extracted and anonymized to support each theme.
26 interviews were carried out. Participants agreed that forum posts are in the public domain and that aggregated information could be freely used by researchers. This was agreed to be a good way of ensuring that the view of people living with diabetes is being heard in research. There was no consensus on the need for permission to use individual information, such as quotations, with some people happy for this to be freely used and others feeling that permission is necessary.
Participants acknowledged the dichotomy of having placed information into the public domain in an unrestricted way, with some interviewees also wanting to retain control of its use. The Internet is a new research location, and rather than trying to apply traditional ethical norms to this new genre, a new modus operandi is required. The authors propose introducing new norms for presenting research carried out with online discussion boards.
越来越多患有长期健康问题的人在网上发布个人健康信息,包括在讨论板上。许多讨论板包含对研究人员可能有用的材料;然而,目前尚不清楚研究人员如何以及是否应该使用这些信息。迄今为止,尚未对那些在网上分享健康信息的个人对于将其分享的信息用于研究目的的看法进行评估。
探讨在线糖尿病讨论板参与者对于健康研究人员是否(以及如何)使用他们在讨论板上的贡献的看法。
采用定性研究方法,通过在线半结构化异步(电子邮件)访谈进行。运用解释性描述方法评估访谈记录,并提取和匿名引用以支持每个主题。
进行了26次访谈。参与者一致认为论坛帖子属于公共领域,研究人员可以自由使用汇总信息。他们认为这是确保糖尿病患者的观点在研究中得到倾听的好方法。对于使用个人信息(如引用)是否需要获得许可,没有达成共识,有些人乐于让其被自由使用,而另一些人则认为需要获得许可。
参与者认识到以无限制的方式将信息置于公共领域所带来的矛盾,一些受访者还希望保留对其使用的控制权。互联网是一个新的研究场所,与其试图将传统伦理规范应用于这种新形式,需要一种新的操作方式。作者建议为在在线讨论板上进行的研究引入新的规范。