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手术室的视频记录——能否做到匿名?

Video recording of the operating room--is anonymity possible?

作者信息

Silas Megan R, Grassia Philippe, Langerman Alexander

机构信息

Department of Surgery, Operative Performance Research Institute, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois; Division of Biological Sciences, Pritzker School of Medicine, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois.

Department of Surgery, Operative Performance Research Institute, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois; Department of Surgery, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois.

出版信息

J Surg Res. 2015 Aug;197(2):272-6. doi: 10.1016/j.jss.2015.03.097. Epub 2015 Apr 9.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Video recording in the operating room (OR) has many potential applications for research, quality improvement, and education. Routine video recording is limited by patient and staff privacy concerns, but this may be overcome by creating videos that are deidentified but still retain sufficient video data for intended applications. It is unknown what effect video processing may have on staff perceptions of identifiability in video recordings; this study was designed to investigate this effect.

METHODS

We presented OR staff members with short clips of the same staged surgical procedure, each representing different data formats or processing (unaltered video, blurred faces, infrared, and point clouds). Staff rated each video on a Likert scale (1 = anonymous, "no one could identify me"; 10 = not anonymous, "it would be easy to identify me) and provided qualitative comments.

RESULTS

Eighty-three staff members agreed to participate. The mean response for the unaltered, blurred faces, infrared, and point cloud videos were 7.05, 3.75, 5.77, and 1.41, respectively (all P < 0.001), demonstrating that postprocessing methods impact perceived anonymity. Staff roles (surgeons versus anesthesiologists versus nurses) were not significantly associated perceptions of identifiability (P ≥ 0.16).

CONCLUSIONS

This study demonstrates that surgical video postprocessing affects OR staff members' perceptions of anonymity and that it is possible to produce videos that retain details about surgical activity while still being perceived as anonymous. These findings are highly relevant to any study that uses video for quality improvement or health care research by providing the first normative data on "deidentification."

摘要

背景

手术室视频记录在研究、质量改进和教育方面有许多潜在应用。常规视频记录受到患者和工作人员隐私问题的限制,但通过创建去识别化但仍保留足够视频数据以用于预期应用的视频,这一问题或许可以得到解决。目前尚不清楚视频处理对工作人员对视频记录中可识别性的认知会产生何种影响;本研究旨在调查这种影响。

方法

我们向手术室工作人员展示了同一场模拟手术过程的短视频片段,每个片段代表不同的数据格式或处理方式(未处理的视频、面部模糊处理、红外处理和点云处理)。工作人员用李克特量表对每个视频进行评分(1 = 匿名,“没人能认出我”;10 = 非匿名,“很容易认出我”)并提供定性评论。

结果

83名工作人员同意参与。未处理视频、面部模糊处理视频、红外处理视频和点云处理视频的平均得分分别为7.05、3.75、5.77和1.41(所有P < 0.001),表明后处理方法会影响对匿名性的感知。工作人员的角色(外科医生、麻醉师与护士)与对可识别性的认知无显著关联(P≥0.16)。

结论

本研究表明手术视频后处理会影响手术室工作人员对匿名性的认知,并且有可能制作出既能保留手术活动细节又仍被视为匿名的视频。这些发现对于任何使用视频进行质量改进或医疗保健研究的研究都具有高度相关性,因为它提供了关于“去识别化”的首个规范性数据。

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