| Literature DB >> 18471295 |
Philip AbdelMalik1, Maged N Kamel Boulos, Ray Jones.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The "place-consciousness" of public health professionals is on the rise as spatial analyses and Geographic Information Systems (GIS) are rapidly becoming key components of their toolbox. However, "place" is most useful at its most precise, granular scale - which increases identification risks, thereby clashing with privacy issues. This paper describes the views and requirements of public health professionals in Canada and the UK on privacy issues and spatial data, as collected through a web-based survey.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18471295 PMCID: PMC2396622 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-8-156
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Sections of the survey
| I | A little about you... | Participant scope, roles, use of GIS, etc |
| II | Current access to data | Asks participants with current access to PID to score 15 kinds of PID* on various dimensions, such as ease and frequency of access, usefulness and importance, etc. |
| III | No current access to data | Asks participants without current access to PID to score same as above |
| IV | Privacy issues | Collects participant opinions on the overall impact of restricted access to PID on public health practice (research, surveillance, health service delivery, etc) |
| V | Current data holdings and provision to others... | Collects information on the sharing of PID within and between participant organisations |
| VI | Solutions and research | Presents two distinct solutions to overcome barriers posed by privacy to public health research, and gather participant views on usefulness, usability and preference for each |
| VII | Qualitative component | Allows participants to provide views and opinions on knowledge of privacy and confidentiality issues/legislation, impact of privacy, proposed research and solutions, and additional thoughts or comments |
| VIII | Further participation and contact | Allows participants to provide contact information if they choose, for follow-up, updates, or piloting of potential solution(s) |
* For all participants: first name; last name; initials; sex; date of birth; date of death; registered GP or family physician; street address; postal code; community name; city/town/village; region/geographic area; latitude/longitude.
For Canadian participants: provincial health insurance plan number; hospital ID.
For UK participants: old NHS number; new NHS number
Number and percent of survey participants by main role and geographical scope
| North American or National | 3 (4.5%) | 6 (9%) | - | 9 (13.6%) | 1 (1.5%) | 2 (3.0%) |
| Provincial/Territorial | 1 (1.5%) | 3 (4.5%) | 4 (6.1%) | 6 (9.1%) | - | 2 (3.0%) |
| Local/Regional | 2 (3.0%) | 7 (10.6%) | 1 (1.5%) | 17 (25.8%) | 1 (1.5%) | 1 (1.5%) |
| European or National | 1 (3.6%) | 1 (3.6%) | - | 1 (3.6%) | - | - |
| Regional | 2 (7.1%) | 1 (3.6%) | 2 (7.1%) | 12 (42.9%) | - | - |
| Local | 2 (7.1%) | - | - | 4 (14.3%) | - | 1 (3.6%) |
*One UK participant who identified a main role in research and analysis declined a response to the question on scope.
Summary of findings
| 1. Is there a requirement for personally identifiable data? | Yes | (93%) |
| 2. What spatial resolution is ideal for public health research? | Lat/Long or address | (69%) |
| 3. Is privacy perceived to be a significant obstacle to public health practice? | Yes | (71%) |
| 4. How knowledgeable do public health professionals consider themselves on privacy? | High Knowledge* | (53%) |
| 5. What is the most critical obstacle to the access and use of personally identifiable data? | Bureaucracy | (33%) |
| 6. What are the views of the public health community on public awareness and perceptions? | Less than 30% of the public is aware | (84%) |
| 7. Which is preferred: raw, case level data, or aggregated, anonymised data? | Raw, case-level data | (66%) |
†Numbers in parentheses are the percent of participants who responded as described
*Participants rating their knowledge as high were also more likely to rate privacy as a more severe obstacle (P < 0.001)