Walker Daniel M, Johnson Tyler, Ford Eric W, Huerta Timothy R
Department of Family Medicine, The Ohio State University, College of Medicine, Columbus, OH, United States.
Department of Health Policy and Management, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, United States.
J Med Internet Res. 2017 Jan 4;19(1):e2. doi: 10.2196/jmir.6296.
As electronic health records (EHRs) become ubiquitous in the health care industry, privacy breaches are increasing and being made public. These breaches may make consumers wary of the technology, undermining its potential to improve care coordination and research.
Given the developing concerns around privacy of personal health information stored in digital format, it is important for providers to understand how views on privacy and security may be associated with patient disclosure of health information. This study aimed to understand how privacy concerns may be shifting patient behavior.
Using a pooled cross-section of data from the 2011 and 2014 cycles of the Health Information and National Trends Survey (HINTS), we tested whether privacy and security concerns, as well as quality perceptions, are associated with the likelihood of withholding personal health information from a provider. A fully interacted multivariate model was used to compare associations between the 2 years, and interaction terms were used to evaluate trends in the factors that are associated with withholding behavior.
No difference was found regarding the effect of privacy and security concerns on withholding behavior between 2011 and 2014. Similarly, whereas perceived high quality of care was found to reduce the likelihood of withholding information from a provider in both 2011 (odds ratio [OR] 0.73, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.56-0.94) and 2014 (OR 0.61, 95% CI 0.48-0.76), no difference was observed between years.
These findings suggest that consumers' beliefs about EHR privacy and security, the relationship between technology use and quality, and intentions to share information with their health care provider have not changed. These findings are counter to the ongoing discussions about the implications of security failures in other domains. Our results suggest that providers could ameliorate privacy and security by focusing on the care quality benefits EHRs provide.
随着电子健康记录(EHRs)在医疗行业变得无处不在,隐私泄露事件日益增多且被公开。这些泄露事件可能会让消费者对该技术产生警惕,削弱其改善护理协调和研究的潜力。
鉴于对以数字格式存储的个人健康信息隐私问题的担忧不断增加,对于医疗服务提供者来说,了解对隐私和安全的看法如何与患者的健康信息披露相关联非常重要。本研究旨在了解隐私担忧如何改变患者行为。
利用来自《健康信息与国家趋势调查》(HINTS)2011年和2014年周期的汇总横截面数据,我们测试了隐私和安全担忧以及质量认知是否与向医疗服务提供者隐瞒个人健康信息的可能性相关。使用一个完全交互的多变量模型来比较这两年之间的关联,并使用交互项来评估与隐瞒行为相关的因素的趋势。
2011年至2014年期间,隐私和安全担忧对隐瞒行为的影响没有差异。同样,虽然在2011年(优势比[OR]0.73,95%置信区间[CI]0.56 - 0.94)和2014年(OR 0.61,95%CI 0.48 - 0.76)都发现感知到的高质量护理会降低向医疗服务提供者隐瞒信息的可能性,但各年份之间没有差异。
这些发现表明,消费者对电子健康记录隐私和安全的信念、技术使用与质量之间的关系以及与医疗服务提供者共享信息的意图没有改变。这些发现与当前关于其他领域安全故障影响的讨论相反。我们的结果表明,医疗服务提供者可以通过关注电子健康记录所提供的护理质量益处来改善隐私和安全。