Smith Robert J, Grande David, Merchant Raina M
R.J. Smith is a fourth-year medical student and research fellow, Penn Medicine Social Media and Health Innovation Lab, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. D. Grande is assistant professor of medicine, Perelman School of Medicine, and senior fellow and director of policy, Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. R.M. Merchant is assistant professor of emergency medicine and director, Penn Medicine Social Media and Health Innovation Lab, Perelman School of Medicine, and senior fellow, Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Acad Med. 2016 Apr;91(4):469-72. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000001022.
With over 1.7 billion individuals engaged in social media, patients and consumers share more about their lives than ever before through wearable devices, smartphone applications, and social media outlets. This cornucopia of data offers significant opportunity for health researchers and clinicians to track and explore how digital presence contributes to patients' health outcomes and use of health care resources. While patients readily share their information with online communities, it is imperative that they maintain a sense of autonomy over who has access to such data. Recent data breaches of major insurance companies and retailers illustrate the challenges and vulnerabilities related to information safety and privacy. Many Web sites and mobile apps require users to agree to data policies, but how those data are mined, protected, used, and externally shared is frequently nontransparent, resulting in a climate of fear and distrust around all forums of digital information sharing. Although such skepticism is perhaps justified, it should not deter health researchers from attempting to collect and analyze these novel data for the purpose of designing unique health interventions. By clarifying intent around digital data acquisition, simplifying consent procedures, and affirming a commitment to privacy, the authors contend that health researchers can partner with patients to transform the boundaries of scientific inquiry.
超过17亿人使用社交媒体,患者和消费者通过可穿戴设备、智能手机应用程序和社交媒体平台比以往任何时候都更广泛地分享他们的生活。这些海量的数据为健康研究人员和临床医生提供了重大机遇,可用于追踪和探索数字足迹如何影响患者的健康状况以及医疗资源的使用。虽然患者愿意与在线社区分享他们的信息,但至关重要的是,他们要对谁能够获取这些数据保持自主控制权。近期主要保险公司和零售商的数据泄露事件凸显了信息安全和隐私方面的挑战与漏洞。许多网站和移动应用程序要求用户同意数据政策,但这些数据如何被挖掘、保护、使用以及外部共享往往并不透明,这导致围绕所有数字信息共享论坛都弥漫着恐惧和不信任的氛围。尽管这种怀疑或许有其合理性,但它不应阻碍健康研究人员为设计独特的健康干预措施而尝试收集和分析这些新型数据。作者认为,通过明确数字数据采集的意图、简化同意程序并确认对隐私的承诺,健康研究人员可以与患者合作,改变科学探究的边界。