Bender Jacqueline Lorene, Cyr Alaina B, Arbuckle Luk, Ferris Lorraine E
Electronic Living Laboratory for Interdisciplinary Cancer Survivorship Research (ELLICSR) Health, Wellness, and Cancer Survivorship Centre, Department of Supportive Care, Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, University Health Network, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
J Med Internet Res. 2017 Apr 6;19(4):e104. doi: 10.2196/jmir.7029.
The Internet and social media offer promising ways to improve the reach, efficiency, and effectiveness of recruitment efforts at a reasonable cost, but raise unique ethical dilemmas. We describe how we used social media to recruit cancer patients and family caregivers for a research study, the ethical issues we encountered, and the strategies we developed to address them.
Drawing on the principles of Privacy by Design (PbD), a globally recognized standard for privacy protection, we aimed to develop a PbD framework for online health research recruitment.
We proposed a focus group study on the dietary behaviors of cancer patients and their families, and the role of Web-based dietary self-management tools. Using an established blog on our hospital website, we proposed publishing a recruitment post and sharing the link on our Twitter and Facebook pages. The Research Ethics Board (REB) raised concern about the privacy risks associated with our recruitment strategy; by clicking on a recruitment post, an individual could inadvertently disclose personal health information to third-party companies engaged in tracking online behavior. The REB asked us to revise our social media recruitment strategy with the following questions in mind: (1) How will you inform users about the potential for privacy breaches and their implications? and (2) How will you protect users from privacy breaches or inadvertently sharing potentially identifying information about themselves?
Ethical guidelines recommend a proportionate approach to ethics assessment, which advocates for risk mitigation strategies that are proportional to the magnitude and probability of risks. We revised our social media recruitment strategy to inform users about privacy risks and to protect their privacy, while at the same time meeting our recruitment objectives. We provide a critical reflection of the perceived privacy risks associated with our social media recruitment strategy and the appropriateness of the risk mitigation strategies that we employed by assessing their alignment with PbD and by discussing the following: (1) What are the potential risks and who is at risk? (2) Is cancer considered "sensitive" personal information? (3) What is the probability of online disclosure of a cancer diagnosis in everyday life? and (4) What are the public's expectations for privacy online and their views about online tracking, profiling, and targeting? We conclude with a PbD framework for online health research recruitment.
Researchers, REBs, ethicists, students, and potential study participants are often unaware of the privacy risks of social media research recruitment and there is no official guidance. Our PbD framework for online health research recruitment is a resource for these wide audiences.
互联网和社交媒体提供了一些很有前景的方式,能够以合理的成本提高招募工作的覆盖面、效率和效果,但也引发了独特的伦理困境。我们描述了我们如何利用社交媒体为一项研究招募癌症患者和家庭护理人员,我们遇到的伦理问题,以及我们制定的应对策略。
借鉴“设计即隐私”(PbD)这一全球公认的隐私保护标准的原则,我们旨在为在线健康研究招募制定一个PbD框架。
我们提议开展一项关于癌症患者及其家人饮食行为以及基于网络的饮食自我管理工具作用的焦点小组研究。利用我们医院网站上一个已有的博客,我们提议发布一篇招募帖子,并在我们的推特和脸书页面上分享链接。研究伦理委员会(REB)对我们的招募策略所涉及的隐私风险表示担忧;通过点击一篇招募帖子,个人可能会无意中向从事在线行为追踪的第三方公司披露个人健康信息。REB要求我们在考虑以下问题的情况下修订我们的社交媒体招募策略:(1)你将如何告知用户隐私泄露的可能性及其影响?以及(2)你将如何保护用户免受隐私泄露或无意中分享有关他们自己的潜在身份识别信息?
伦理准则推荐采用一种相称的伦理评估方法,该方法提倡采用与风险的严重程度和可能性相称的风险缓解策略。我们修订了我们的社交媒体招募策略,以告知用户隐私风险并保护他们的隐私,同时实现我们的招募目标。我们通过评估其与PbD的一致性并讨论以下内容,对与我们的社交媒体招募策略相关的感知隐私风险以及我们所采用的风险缓解策略的适当性进行了批判性反思:(1)潜在风险有哪些,谁处于风险之中?(2)癌症是否被视为“敏感”个人信息?(3)在日常生活中癌症诊断在网上被披露的可能性有多大?以及((4)公众对在线隐私的期望是什么,他们对在线追踪、画像和定位的看法如何?我们最后得出了一个用于在线健康研究招募的PbD框架。
研究人员、REB、伦理学家、学生以及潜在的研究参与者往往没有意识到社交媒体研究招募的隐私风险,并且没有官方指导。我们的在线健康研究招募PbD框架是面向这些广泛受众的一种资源。