National Perinatal Epidemiology Unit, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Health Experiences Research Group, Department of Primary Health Care Sciences, Oxford University, Oxford, UK.
BMJ Open. 2019 May 30;9(5):e026469. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-026469.
To explore why and how fertility patients decide to allow (or deny) the use of personal data held in the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority registry for linkage and research.
A qualitative study was conducted using in-depth face-to-face interviews and an online survey to garner information on experience and opinions from fertility clinic patients and staff. Verbatim transcripts were analysed using the 'one sheet of paper' method to identify themes.
Women and men were recruited between September 2015 and December 2017, via fertility clinics across England and online advertising, then interviewed at a location convenient to them.
20 patients and 9 staff were interviewed, 40 patients completed the online survey.
Consent for disclosure (CD) forms are completed at a stressful time, when patients often feel overwhelmed; these forms were considered a low priority. Perceptions of benefit (to individuals, to wider society) and harm (misuse of data, impact of disclosure on child) influenced consent. Important themes included: understanding of the forms; trust in those asking, in researchers, in the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA); and wider attitudes to data use. Issues influencing response, and thus the representativeness of the HFEA data set, were highlighted.
Understanding what is being asked, and trust in those organisations keeping and using personal data, affects individual decisions to consent to disclosure. Patients were influenced by the wider context of infertility, as well as general concerns about data sharing and security. Low consent rates, which vary by clinic and likely also by patients' characteristics, have adverse implications for research conducted using HFEA data collected after 2008. Public understanding of data use and security is relatively poor; increased public trust in, and awareness of, research based on routine data could improve consent to data use and reduce the risk of bias.
探索生育患者决定允许(或拒绝)将人类受精和胚胎管理局登记处持有的个人数据用于关联和研究的原因和方式。
采用定性研究,通过深入的面对面访谈和在线调查,从生育诊所的患者和工作人员那里收集有关经验和意见的信息。使用“一张纸”方法分析逐字记录,以确定主题。
2015 年 9 月至 2017 年 12 月期间,通过英格兰各地的生育诊所和在线广告招募参与者,然后在他们方便的地点进行访谈。
共访谈了 20 名患者和 9 名工作人员,40 名患者完成了在线调查。
同意披露(CD)的表格是在患者感到压力大且情绪不稳定的时期填写的;这些表格被视为低优先级事项。对益处(对个人、对更广泛的社会)和危害(数据滥用、披露对孩子的影响)的看法影响了同意。重要的主题包括:对表格的理解;对提出要求的人、研究人员、人类受精和胚胎管理局(HFEA)的信任;以及对数据使用的更广泛态度。突出了影响反应的问题,从而影响 HFEA 数据集的代表性。
理解所要求的内容以及对保存和使用个人数据的组织的信任,会影响个人同意披露的决定。患者受到不孕症更广泛背景的影响,以及对数据共享和安全性的普遍关注。同意率低,不同诊所的同意率不同,而且可能还因患者的特征而异,这对使用 2008 年后收集的 HFEA 数据进行的研究产生了不利影响。公众对数据使用和安全性的理解相对较差;增加公众对基于常规数据的研究的信任和认识,可以提高对数据使用的同意率,并降低偏差风险。