Burns Kara, Belton Suzanne
School of Applied Sciences, RMIT University, Building 223, Level 1, Bundoora West Campus, Plenty Road, Bundoora, Vic. 3083, Australia.
Aust Health Rev. 2013 Sep;37(4):437-41. doi: 10.1071/AH12039.
Medical photography illustrates what people would prefer to keep private, is practiced when people are vulnerable, and has the power to freeze a moment in time. Given it is a sensitive area of health, lawful and ethical practice is paramount. This paper recognises and seeks to clarify the possibility of widespread clinician-taken medical photography in a tertiary hospital in northern Australia, examining the legal and ethical implications of this practice. A framework of Northern Territory law, state Department of Health policy and human rights theory were used to argue the thesis. Clinicians from 13 purposively chosen wards were asked to participate in an anonymous survey and confidential in-depth interviews. Questions were generated from the literature and local knowledge on the topics of 'occurrence', 'image use', 'quality of consent', 'cameras and technology', 'confidentiality', 'data storage and security', 'hospital policy and law' and 'cultural issues'. One hundred and seventy surveys and eights interviews were analysed using descriptive statistics and theme and content analysis, then triangulated for similarity, difference and unique responses. Forty-eight percent of clinicians surveyed take medical photographs, with the majority using hospital-owned cameras. However, one-fifth of clinicians reported photographing with personal mobile phones. Non-compliance with written consent requirements articulated in policy was endemic, with most clinicians surveyed obtaining only verbal consent. Labeling, storage, copyright and cultural issues were generally misunderstood, with a significant number of clinicians risking the security of patient information by storing images on personal devices. If this tertiary hospital does not develop a clinical photography action plan to address staff lack of knowledge, and noncompliance with policy and mobile phone use, patients' data is at risk of being distributed into the public domain where unauthorised publication may cause psychological harm and have legal ramifications for th hospital, its patients, and staff.
医学摄影展示了人们希望保密的内容,是在人们脆弱时进行的,并且有能力定格某个瞬间。鉴于这是健康领域的一个敏感区域,合法且符合道德的做法至关重要。本文认识到并试图阐明在澳大利亚北部一家三级医院广泛存在临床医生拍摄医学照片的可能性,审视这种做法的法律和伦理影响。运用北领地法律框架、州卫生部政策和人权理论来论证这一论点。从13个经过有目的挑选的病房中邀请临床医生参与一项匿名调查和保密的深度访谈。问题是根据关于“发生率”“图像使用”“同意的质量”“相机和技术”“保密性”“数据存储与安全”“医院政策与法律”以及“文化问题”等主题的文献和当地知识提出的。使用描述性统计以及主题和内容分析方法对170份调查问卷和8次访谈进行了分析,然后对相似性、差异性和独特回答进行了三角测量。接受调查的临床医生中有48%拍摄医学照片,大多数人使用医院配备的相机。然而,五分之一的临床医生报告使用个人手机拍摄。普遍存在不遵守政策中明确规定的书面同意要求的情况,大多数接受调查的临床医生仅获得了口头同意。标签、存储、版权和文化问题普遍被误解,相当多的临床医生将图像存储在个人设备上,从而使患者信息安全面临风险。如果这家三级医院不制定临床摄影行动计划来解决工作人员知识欠缺、不遵守政策以及手机使用等问题,患者数据就有可能被传播到公共领域,未经授权的发布可能会对患者造成心理伤害,并给医院、其患者和工作人员带来法律后果。