Rose Christian, Shearer Emily, Woller Isabela, Foster Ashley, Ashenburg Nicholas, Kim Ireh, Newberry Jennifer
Department of Emergency Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, 500 Pasteur Dr, Stanford, CA, 94305, United States, 1 (650) 723-5111.
Department of Emergency Medicine, Alpert School of Medicine, Brown University, Providence, RI, United States.
JMIR Form Res. 2025 Feb 6;9:e68371. doi: 10.2196/68371.
Precision medicine promises to revolutionize health care by providing the right care to the right patient at the right time. However, the emergency department's unique mandate to treat "anyone, anywhere, anytime" creates critical tensions with precision medicine's requirements for comprehensive patient data and computational analysis. As emergency departments serve as health care's safety net and provide a growing proportion of acute care in America, identifying and addressing the ethical challenges of implementing precision medicine in this setting is crucial to prevent exacerbation of existing health care disparities. The rapid advancement of precision medicine technologies makes it imperative to understand these challenges before widespread implementation in emergency care settings.
This study aimed to identify high priority ethical concerns facing the implementation of precision medicine in the emergency department.
We conducted a qualitative study using a modified nominal group technique (NGT) with emergency physicians who had previous knowledge of precision medicine concepts. The NGT process consisted of four phases: (1) silent generation of ideas, (2) round-robin sharing of ideas, (3) structured discussion and clarification, and (4) thematic grouping of priorities. Participants represented diverse practice settings (county hospital, community hospital, academic center, and integrated managed care consortium) and subspecialties (education, ethics, pediatrics, diversity, equity, inclusion, and informatics) across various career stages from residents to late-career physicians.
A total of 12 emergency physicians identified 82 initial challenges during individual ideation, which were consolidated to 48 unique challenges after removing duplicates and combining related items. The average participant contributed 6.8 (SD 2.9) challenges. These challenges were organized into a framework with 3 themes: values, privacy, and justice. The framework identified the need to address these themes across 3 time points of the precision medicine process: acquisition of data, actualization in the care setting, and the after effects of its use. This systematic organization revealed interrelated concerns spanning from data collection and bias to implementation challenges and long-term consequences for health care equity.
Our study developed a novel framework that maps critical ethical challenges across 3 domains (values, privacy, and justice) and 3 temporal stages of precision medicine implementation. This framework identifies high-priority areas for future research and policy development, particularly around data representation, privacy protection, and equitable access. Successfully addressing these challenges is essential to realize precision medicine's potential while preserving emergency medicine's core mission as health care's safety net.
精准医学有望通过在恰当的时间为恰当的患者提供恰当的治疗,给医疗保健带来变革。然而,急诊科“随时随地治疗任何人”的独特使命与精准医学对全面患者数据和计算分析的要求产生了严重冲突。由于急诊科是医疗保健的安全网,且在美国提供的急性护理比例不断增加,识别并应对在这种环境下实施精准医学的伦理挑战,对于防止现有医疗保健差距加剧至关重要。精准医学技术的快速发展使得在急诊护理环境中广泛实施之前了解这些挑战变得势在必行。
本研究旨在确定急诊科实施精准医学面临的高度优先的伦理问题。
我们采用改良的名义群体技术(NGT)对了解精准医学概念的急诊医生进行了定性研究。NGT 过程包括四个阶段:(1)独立产生想法,(2)轮流分享想法,(3)结构化讨论与澄清,(4)对优先事项进行主题分组。参与者代表了不同的执业环境(县医院、社区医院、学术中心和综合管理医疗联盟)以及从住院医师到职业生涯后期医生等不同职业阶段的各个亚专业(教育、伦理、儿科、多样性、公平、包容和信息学)。
共有 12 名急诊医生在个人构思过程中识别出 82 个初始挑战,去除重复项并合并相关项目后,这些挑战被整合为 48 个独特挑战。平均每位参与者提出了 6.8(标准差 2.9)个挑战。这些挑战被组织成一个包含三个主题的框架:价值观、隐私和公正。该框架确定了在精准医学过程的三个时间点解决这些主题的必要性:数据获取、在护理环境中的实现以及使用后的影响。这种系统的组织揭示了从数据收集和偏差到实施挑战以及对医疗保健公平性的长期影响等相互关联的问题。
我们的研究开发了一个新颖的框架,该框架描绘了精准医学实施的三个领域(价值观、隐私和公正)以及三个时间阶段中的关键伦理挑战。该框架确定了未来研究和政策制定的高度优先领域,特别是围绕数据呈现、隐私保护和公平获取。成功应对这些挑战对于实现精准医学的潜力同时保留急诊医学作为医疗保健安全网的核心使命至关重要。