Nagappan Ashwini, Zhu Xi
Department of Health Policy and Management, Fielding School of Public Health, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA 90095, United States.
J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2025 Apr 1;32(4):702-711. doi: 10.1093/jamia/ocaf014.
To identify distinct patterns in consumer willingness to share health data with various stakeholders and analyze characteristics across consumer groups.
Data from the Rock Health Digital Health Consumer Adoption Survey from 2018, 2019, 2020, and 2022 were analyzed. This study comprised a Census-matched representative sample of U.S. adults. Latent class analysis (LCA) identified groups of respondents with similar data-sharing attitudes. Groups were compared by sociodemographics, health status, and digital health utilization.
We identified three distinct LCA groups: (1) Wary (36.8%), (2) Discerning (47.9%), and (3) Permissive (15.3%). The Wary subgroup exhibited reluctance to share health data with any stakeholder, with predicted probabilities of willingness to share ranging from 0.07 for pharmaceutical companies to 0.34 for doctors/clinicians. The Permissive group showed a high willingness, with predicted probabilities greater than 0.75 for most stakeholders except technology companies and government organizations. The Discerning group was selective, willing to share with healthcare-related entities and family (predicted probabilities >0.62), but reluctant to share with other stakeholders (predicted probabilities <0.29). Individual characteristics were associated with LCA group membership.
Findings highlight a persistent trust in traditional healthcare providers. However, the varying willingness to share with non-traditional stakeholders suggests that while some consumers are open to sharing, others remain hesitant and selective. Data privacy policies and practices need to recognize and respond to multifaceted and stakeholder-specific attitudes.
LCA reveals significant heterogeneity in health data-sharing attitudes among U.S. consumers, providing insights to inform the development of data privacy policies.
识别消费者与不同利益相关者共享健康数据的不同模式,并分析各消费者群体的特征。
分析了2018年、2019年、2020年和2022年罗克健康数字健康消费者采用情况调查的数据。本研究包括一个与美国成年人人口普查相匹配的代表性样本。潜在类别分析(LCA)确定了具有相似数据共享态度的受访者群体。通过社会人口统计学、健康状况和数字健康使用情况对各群体进行比较。
我们确定了三个不同的LCA群体:(1)谨慎型(36.8%),(2)有辨别力型(47.9%),(3)宽容型(15.3%)。谨慎型亚组表现出不愿与任何利益相关者共享健康数据,与制药公司共享的预测概率为0.07,与医生/临床医生共享的预测概率为0.34。宽容型群体表现出高度的意愿,除技术公司和政府组织外,与大多数利益相关者共享的预测概率大于0.75。有辨别力型群体具有选择性,愿意与医疗相关实体和家人共享(预测概率>0.62),但不愿与其他利益相关者共享(预测概率<0.29)。个体特征与LCA群体成员身份相关。
研究结果凸显了对传统医疗服务提供者的持续信任。然而,与非传统利益相关者共享数据的意愿各不相同,这表明虽然一些消费者愿意共享,但另一些消费者仍然犹豫不决且具有选择性。数据隐私政策和做法需要认识并回应多方面的、针对特定利益相关者的态度。
LCA揭示了美国消费者在健康数据共享态度上存在显著异质性,为数据隐私政策的制定提供了参考依据。