Bautista John Robert, Usman Muhammad, Harrell Daniel Toshio, Meyer Eric T, Khurshid Anjum
School of Information, The University of Texas at Austin, USA.
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA.
Blockchain Healthc Today. 2022 Mar 14;5. doi: 10.30953/bhty.v5.199. eCollection 2022.
While existing research by our team has demonstrated the feasibility of building a decentralized identity management application ("MediLinker") for health information, there are implementation issues related to testing such blockchain-based health applications in real-world clinical settings. In this study, we identified clinical, organizational and regulatory, and ethical and social (CORES) issues, including recommendations, associated with deploying MediLinker, and blockchain in general, for clinical testing.
CORES issues and recommendations were identified through a focus group with 11 academic, industry, and government experts on March 26, 2021. They were grouped according to their expertise: clinical care ( = 4), organizational and regulatory concerns ( = 4), and ethical and social issues ( = 3). The focus group was conducted via Zoom in which experts were briefed about the study aims, formed into breakout groups to identify key issues based on their group's expertise, and reconvened to share identified issues with other groups and to discuss potential recommendations to address such issues. The focus group was video recorded and transcribed. The resulting transcriptions and meeting notes were imported to MAXQDA 2018 for thematic analysis.
Clinical experts identified issues that concern the clinical system, clinical administrators, clinicians, and patients. Organizational and regulatory experts emphasized issues on accountability, compliance, and legal safeguards. Ethics and social-context experts raised issues on trust, transparency, digital divide, and health-related digital autonomy. Accordingly, experts proposed six recommendations that could address most of the identified issues: (1) design interfaces based on patient preferences, (2) ensure testing with diverse populations, (3) ensure compliance with existing policies, (4) present potential positive outcomes to top management, (5) maintain clinical workflow, and (6) increase the public's awareness of blockchain.
This study identified a myriad of CORES issues associated with deploying MediLinker in clinical settings. Moreover, the study also uncovered several recommendations that could address such issues. The findings raise awareness on CORES issues that should be considered when designing, developing, and deploying blockchain for healthcare. Further, the findings provide additional insights into the development of MediLinker from a prototype to a minimum viable product for clinical testing. Future studies can use CORES as a socio-technical model to identify issues and recommendations associated with deploying health information technologies in clinical settings.
虽然我们团队的现有研究已证明构建用于健康信息的去中心化身份管理应用程序(“医链通”)的可行性,但在现实世界的临床环境中测试此类基于区块链的健康应用程序存在实施问题。在本研究中,我们确定了与部署医链通以及一般区块链进行临床测试相关的临床、组织与监管、伦理与社会(CORES)问题,包括相关建议。
2021年3月26日,通过与11位学术、行业和政府专家组成的焦点小组确定了CORES问题及建议。他们根据专业领域分组:临床护理(4人)、组织与监管问题(4人)以及伦理与社会问题(3人)。焦点小组通过Zoom进行,向专家介绍了研究目的,分成小组根据各自专业领域确定关键问题,然后重新召集以与其他小组分享确定的问题并讨论解决这些问题的潜在建议。焦点小组会议进行了录像和转录。将得到的转录文本和会议记录导入MAXQDA 2018进行主题分析。
临床专家确定了涉及临床系统、临床管理人员、临床医生和患者的问题。组织与监管专家强调了问责制、合规性和法律保障方面的问题。伦理与社会背景专家提出了关于信任、透明度、数字鸿沟和与健康相关的数字自主权的问题。相应地,专家们提出了六项建议,可解决大多数已确定的问题:(1)根据患者偏好设计界面;(2)确保对不同人群进行测试;(3)确保符合现有政策;(4)向高层管理人员展示潜在的积极成果;(5)保持临床工作流程;(6)提高公众对区块链的认识。
本研究确定了在临床环境中部署医链通相关的众多CORES问题。此外,该研究还发现了一些可解决此类问题的建议。这些发现提高了人们对在设计、开发和部署用于医疗保健的区块链时应考虑的CORES问题的认识。此外,这些发现为医链通从原型开发为临床测试的最小可行产品提供了更多见解。未来的研究可以使用CORES作为社会技术模型,以识别与在临床环境中部署健康信息技术相关的问题和建议。