Leeds Sustainability Institute, Leeds Beckett University, Leeds, LS2 8AG, UK.
School of Pharmacy and Medical Sciences, University of Bradford, BD7 1DP, UK; Bradford Institute for Health Research, Bradford Royal Infirmary, Bradford, BD9 6RJ, UK.
Int J Med Inform. 2021 May;149:104439. doi: 10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2021.104439. Epub 2021 Mar 15.
Optimising the use of patient data has the potential to produce a transformational change in healthcare planning, treatment, condition prevention and understanding disease progression. Establishing how people's trust could be secured and a social licence to share data could be achieved is of paramount importance.
The study took place across Yorkshire and the Humber, in the North of the England, using a sequential mixed methods approach comprising focus groups, surveys and co-design groups. Twelve focus groups explored people's response to how their health and social care data is, could, and should be used. A survey examined who should be able to see health and care records, acceptable uses of anonymous health and care records, and trust in different organisations. Case study cards addressed willingness for data to be used for different purposes. Co-creation workshops produced a set of guidelines for how data should be used.
Focus group participants (n = 80) supported sharing health and care data for direct care and were surprised that this is not already happening. They discussed concerns about the currency and accuracy of their records and possible stigma associated with certain diagnoses, such as mental health conditions. They were less supportive of social care access to their records. They discussed three main concerns about their data being used for research or service planning: being identified; security limitations; and the potential rationing of care on the basis of information in their record such as their lifestyle choices. Survey respondents (n = 1031) agreed that their GP (98 %) and hospital doctors and nurses (93 %) should be able to see their health and care records. There was more limited support for pharmacists (37 %), care staff (36 %), social workers (24 %) and researchers (24 %). Respondents thought their health and social care records should be used to help plan services (88 %), to help people stay healthy (67 %), to help find cures for diseases (67 %), for research for the public good (58 %), but only 16 % for commercial research. Co-creation groups developed a set of principles for a social licence for data sharing based around good governance, effective processes, the type of organisation, and the ability to opt in and out.
People support their data being shared for a range of purposes and co-designed a set of principles that would secure their trust and consent to data sharing.
优化患者数据的使用有潜力在医疗保健规划、治疗、疾病预防和了解疾病进展方面带来变革。确保人们的信任得到保障,并获得数据共享的社会许可至关重要。
该研究在英格兰北部的约克郡和亨伯地区进行,采用了顺序混合方法,包括焦点小组、调查和共同设计小组。12 个焦点小组探讨了人们对其健康和社会保健数据的使用、可以使用以及应该如何使用的反应。一项调查考察了谁应该能够查看健康和护理记录、匿名健康和护理记录的可接受用途,以及对不同组织的信任。案例研究卡解决了数据用于不同目的的意愿问题。共同创作研讨会制定了一套数据使用指南。
焦点小组参与者(n=80)支持为直接护理共享健康和护理数据,并对这尚未发生感到惊讶。他们讨论了对记录的时效性和准确性的担忧,以及与某些诊断相关的可能耻辱感,例如心理健康状况。他们对社会护理访问其记录不太支持。他们讨论了对其数据用于研究或服务规划的三个主要担忧:被识别;安全限制;以及根据他们记录中的信息(例如他们的生活方式选择)对护理进行配给的可能性。调查受访者(n=1031)同意他们的全科医生(98%)和医院医生和护士(93%)应该能够查看他们的健康和护理记录。对药剂师(37%)、护理人员(36%)、社会工作者(24%)和研究人员(24%)的支持较少。受访者认为他们的健康和社会保健记录应用于帮助规划服务(88%)、帮助人们保持健康(67%)、帮助寻找疾病的治疗方法(67%)、为公众利益进行研究(58%),但只有 16%用于商业研究。共同创作小组围绕良好治理、有效流程、组织类型以及选择加入和退出的能力,为数据共享的社会许可制定了一套原则。
人们支持将他们的数据用于各种目的,并共同设计了一套原则,以确保他们对数据共享的信任和同意。