| Literature DB >> 26577591 |
Vicki Xafis1,2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A key ethical issue arising in data linkage research relates to consent requirements. Patients' consent preferences in the context of health research have been explored but their consent preferences regarding data linkage specifically have been under-explored. In addition, the views on data linkage are often those of patient groups. As a result, little is known about lay people's views and their preferences about consent requirements in the context of data linkage. This study explores lay people's views and justifications regarding the acceptability of conducting data linkage research without obtaining consent.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26577591 PMCID: PMC4647472 DOI: 10.1186/s12910-015-0070-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Ethics ISSN: 1472-6939 Impact factor: 2.652
Fig. 1Purposive sampling method for identification of six pertinent groups. * “Agreed” means the parent returned a study form in the opt-in arm OR did not return a study form in the opt-out arm, thereby facilitating the data linkage of the child’s vaccination data to his/her hospital data Coded as Y. ** “Did not agree” means the parent returned a study form in the opt-out arm OR did not return a study form in the opt-in arm, thereby precluding the data linkage of the child’s vaccination data to his/her hospital data Coded as N
Participant characteristics
| Pseudonym | Age | Level of education | Continent Born |
|---|---|---|---|
| Margaret | 27 | Tertiary | Australia |
| Mary | 28 | TAFEa (incl. trades) | Australia |
| Molly | 28 | TAFE (incl. trades) | Australia |
| Mel | 29 | Tertiary | S Asia |
| Mandy | 29.6b | Tertiary | S Asia |
| Helen | 26 | Yr 11 or equivalent | Australia |
| Holly | 24 | Yr 12 or equivalent | Australia |
| Haley | 29 | TAFE (incl. trades) | Australia |
| Henrietta | 24 | Tertiary | N America |
| Harmony | 27 | Tertiary | Australia |
| Teresa | 41 | Tertiary | Australia |
| Tina | 39 | TAFE (incl. trades) | Australia |
| Tracey | 30 | Tertiary | S Asia |
| Tegan | 31 | Tertiary | Australia |
| Trixie | 39 | Tertiary | Europe |
| Vanessa | 35 | Tertiary | Australia |
| Vallery | 30 | TAFE (incl. trades) | Australia |
| Victoria | 32 | Post graduate degree | Australia |
| Verity | 33 | Tertiary | Australia |
| Virginia | 34 | Tertiary | Australia |
| John | 36 | TAFE (incl. trades) | Africa |
| Jack | 30 | Tertiary | Australia |
| Jacob | 31 | Tertiary | S E Asia |
| Darren | 25 | Yr 10 or equivalent | Greater Middle East |
| Danny | 31 | Tertiary | Asia |
| Don | 31 | Tertiary | Greater Middle East |
aTechnical and Further Education institutions providing vocational tertiary education courses
bThere was an error in the original data, which was only identified after the analysis of the current data. As a result, this participant was 29 and 6 months but was included in the 30+ group
Fig. 2Interview selection figures. # Not contactable refers to calls not being answered, phones being disconnected, or unresponsiveness to messages left. ^The furthest travelled for an interview was 512 km by plane. It was later decided that such travel distances were not possible
Scenarios
| Scenario 1- health data linked by experts |
| A study is being conducted by university researchers and they want hospital information (which includes the medical history, name, age, ethnicity, and postcode), a cancer register, and a deaths register to be linked with each other. The researchers want to find out if there is a link between lung cancer and living next to busy main roads. The findings will contribute to better town planning. In order for the study to be successful and so that it provides accurate findings to ultimately help with the management of some forms of cancer, it’s very important for everyone on the cancer register (several thousand people) to be included in the study. The researchers will never have any identifying information because they will not do the linkage themselves and all information that identifies people will be removed before they get the linked data. |
| Scenario 2 - health data linked by experts |
| Researchers in collaboration with the ambulance service are conducting research into cardiac arrests and resuscitation to see if call-out response times affect survival rates. They will need to have data about approximately 300,000 people on the ambulance databases, hospital admissions, and death registers linked. The researchers will never have any identifying information because they will not do the linkage themselves and all information that identifies people will be removed before they get the linked data. |
| Scenario 3 - health & criminal records data linked by experts |
| University researchers and researchers from a mental health organisation want to study violent behaviour in people experiencing mental health issues. They need to link about 50,000 mental health hospital records Australia-wide (including admissions and discharge information) with police incident information, such as calls for domestic violence. The researchers will never have any identifying information because they will not do the linkage themselves and all information that identifies people will be removed before they get the linked data. The Police will not have access to the mental health hospital records. |
| Scenario 4 – health, Work Cover & employment data linked by researchers |
| University researchers are conducting research on work-related stress on behalf of Work Cover to discover whether there is a link between increased levels of stress and work insecurity, for example caused by casual employment. They need to link 100,000 work stress claims containing identifiable general and mental health information with employment data including employment history, leave information, seniority level etc. for the same individuals who are employed at the Government organisations involved in the research. In this instance, the linkage will not be done by an independent team of data linkage experts. Instead, the researchers will do the linkage themselves. A report with de-identified findings will be made available to Work Cover. [In discussions with participants, it was made clear that work stress claims would be accessed from WorkCovera.] |
aWorkCover is a Government agency aimed at preventing, compensating, and rehabilitating workers involved in occupational accidents or affected by diseases resulting from their workplace. See http://www.workcover.com/
Percentage of consent preferences across scenarios
| Consent should be sought | Consent need not be sought | Notification only | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Scenario 1 | 35 % ( | 58 % ( | 8 % ( |
| Scenario 2 | 19 % ( | 73 % ( | 8 % ( |
| Scenario 3 | 15 % ( | 85 % ( | 0 % ( |
| Scenario 4 | 69 % ( | 12 % ( | 19 % ( |
Constant views and shifts in views within scenarios
| (Column A) | Scenario 1 | Scenario 2 | Scenario 3 | Scenario 4 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Consent shifts and final consent decisions | No. of participants | No. of participants | No. of participants | No. of participants | |
| NDa | Db | ||||
| a. Consent | 5 | 4 | 2 | 3 | 15 (8 = OIc, 7 = OOd) |
| b. No consent | 4 | 17 | 22 | 21 | 1 |
| c. Consent → No consent | 11 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 1 |
| d. Consent → No consent → Consent | 3 | 1 | -- | -- | -- |
| e. No consent → Consent | 1 | -- | -- | 1 | 4 (1 = OI/3 = OO) |
| f. Consent → No consent → Inform of research findings | 1 | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| g. No consent → Notification of research → Inform of research findings | 1 | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| h. Consent → No consent → Notification → Consent | -- | 1 | -- | -- | -- |
| i. No consent → Notification | -- | -- | -- | -- | 1 |
| j. No consent → Consent → Notification | -- | -- | -- | -- | 3 |
| k. No consent → Consent → Notification → No consent | -- | -- | -- | -- | 1 |
| Total participants | 26 | 26 | 26 | 26 | 26 |
aND = not deceased, bD = deceased, cOI = opt in, dOO = opt out
Scenario 1 justifications for consent choices
| Scenario 1 - health data linked by experts | |
|---|---|
| Consent justifications | No consent justifications |
| People have right to choose (6)a | Use of de-identified data does not require consent (12) |
| People need to be aware of what is happening (6) | Acceptable practice because of the benefits (9) |
| To ensure people are not upset/do not object (6) | Large data sets serve as protection against identification (3) |
| Consent should be sought at initial point of data collection (5) | Strict measures/guidelines provide protection (3) |
| Information belongs to people (4) | Participants are not directly involved (3) |
| People prefer to be given the choice (3) | Practical considerations of obtaining consent from thousands (3) |
| Consent ensures that privacy is protected (3) | |
| Seeking consent is a sign of respect (2) | Consent lowers research participation rates (3) |
| Consent provides protection (2) | Knowledge of data linkage process allays concerns so no consent is acceptable (2) |
| Use of information without consent leads to trouble for researchers (2) | |
| Consent is required for everything (2) | Acceptable if security and safety measures in place (2) |
| Consent should be sought for all research (2) | Privacy legislation binds researchers and protects participants (2) The more participants involved, the better the quality of the study (1) |
| Disclosure of information to a third party requires consent (2) | No need for consent if data linkage organisation is trustworthy (1) |
| Unfair to force participation (1) | Medical information will not be provided to other parties (1) |
| People want to control their information (1) | |
| Some don’t trust that information stays anonymous (1) | Use of de-identified information does not breach privacy (1) |
| Seeking consent is courteous (1) | Retrospective use of data does not require consent (1) |
| Consent required because of cultural differences; some people don’t like their information used if they derive no benefits, or if there are perceived risks (1) | Acceptable depending on study (1) |
| Consent is required when researchers access identifiable information (1) | Acceptable due to cost and time constraints involved when obtaining consent (1) |
| Consent is required when other spheres of life (apart from health) are involved (1) | |
| Seeking consent for use of private information is an ethical requirement (1) | |
| Consent is a legal requirement (1) | |
| To cater for future uses of the same data (1) | |
aBracketed numbers reveal the number of participants offering each justification
Scenario 2 justifications for consent choices
| Scenario 2 - health data linked by experts | |
|---|---|
| Consent justifications | No consent justifications |
| Consent should be sought at initial point of data collection (4)a | Use of de-identified data does not require consent (13/D9b) |
| To ensure people are not upset/do not object (2) | Acceptable practice because of the benefits (8/D1) |
| People have right to choose (1) | Practical considerations of obtaining consent from thousands (4/D2) |
| Information belongs to people (1) | Audit type activities do not require consent (3/D1) |
| People want to control their information (1) | Acceptable due to cost and time constraints involved when obtaining consent (3/D2) |
| Consent for deceased person’s information should be sought because they still have rights (D1) | |
| Seeking consent is a sign of respect (1/D1)b | Requesting consent for use of de-identified data is burdensome, as people are time-poor (1/D1) |
| Seeking consent for deceased people’s information is appropriate because knowledge that they are contributing to society would bring comfort to families (D1) | Requesting consent could create difficulties, as people’s confidence in the fact that research uses de-identified data might be reduced (1) |
| Acceptable if security and safety measures in place (1) | |
| Use of information without consent leads to trouble for researchers (1) | Use of information will not prejudice participants (1) |
| Not seeking consent infringes privacy (1) | Acceptable not to seek consent from those who cannot be contacted if strict guidelines adhered to (1) |
| Consent should be sought for all research (1) | Not dealing with people directly (1) |
| Consent for use of data should be sought whenever health services are accessed. Therefore, a deceased person’s consent would have already been obtained (D1) | Retrospective use of medical data acceptable (1) |
| Requesting consent for deceased people’s information could traumatise family (D5) | |
| There are ways to achieve contact to request consent despite difficulties (1) | Data regarding deceased people is invaluable and should be included (D2) |
| Relatives will be unaware of use of data relating to deceased relative (D2) | |
| Use of deceased people’s information does not impact on deceased person or their family (D2) | |
aBracketed numbers reveal the number of participants offering each justification
b D denotes justifications provided in relation to deceased individuals’ information
Scenario 3 justifications for consent choices
| Scenario 3 - health & criminal records data linked by experts | |
|---|---|
| Consent justifications | No consent justifications |
| Sensitivity of data requires that consent be obtained (2)a | Acceptable practice because of the benefits (15) |
| The more sensitive the data, the greater the need to obtain consent (2) | Use of de-identified data does not require consent (12) |
| Practical considerations of obtaining consent from thousands (5) | |
| People have right to choose (1) | Given the difficulties in obtaining consent, it is best to conduct research as benefits would be great (4) |
| Not seeking consent infringes privacy (1) | |
| Consent should be sought for all research (1) | Research focusing on issues such as violence, which affects others/the whole community, justifies not obtaining consent (3) |
| Mental health issues do not warrant not obtaining consent from participant or authorised carer (1) | Strict measures/guidelines provide protection (2) |
| The need for large number of participants is no excuse for not considering obtaining consent (1) | Acceptable to do mental health research without consent (2) |
| Consent not very important where safety issues are concerned (2) | |
| Research involving ‘vulnerable’ people requires consent (1) | When you weigh up individual vs. community benefits, community benefits here are greater (1) |
| If there is a legal guardian, consent should probably be sought (1) | No harm to individuals because they will not be named (or ‘outed’) (1) |
| No impact on participants, who will be unaware that their data were used (1) | |
| Some participants cannot consent (1) | |
| Trying to get consent (including from relatives) could delay research, which | |
| should be done promptly because if its nature (1) | |
| Some participants may not have guardians (1) | |
aBracketed numbers reveal the number of participants offering each justification
Scenario 4 justifications for consent choices
| Scenario 4 - health, Work Cover & employment data linked by researchers | |
|---|---|
| Consent justifications | No consent justifications |
| Consent provides protection against potential impact of research (10)a | Acceptable practice because of the benefits (5) |
| Access to identifiable data by researchers requires consent (9) | The findings are presented in de-identified form (3) |
| Practical considerations of obtaining consent from thousands (3) | |
| Consent required when researchers do the linkage (7) | Acceptable due to cost and time constraints involved when obtaining consent (2) |
| Consent is required when other spheres of life (apart from health) are involved (7) | Consent lowers research participation rates (2) |
| Opt-out consent would result in more participants being involved (6) | Low participation rates impact on quality of research (2) |
| Consent required because of lack of separation of tasks (4) | The information is already there so it should just be used without consent (2) |
| People have right to choose (4) | |
| Researchers may disclose information to third party (2) | Researchers are not interested in specific cases (2) |
| Someone on the research team may know the research participants (2) | Strict measures/guidelines provide protection (2) |
| To ensure people are not upset/do not object (2) | Getting consent could have detrimental effect on participants (1) |
| No need for consent if data linkage organisation is trustworthy (1) | |
| Opt-in consent captures the people who really want to participate (2) | Researchers will not use information obtained without consent to harm participants (1) |
| Having the option to consent is good (2) | |
| Information belongs to people (1) | Provided that the linkage organisation was involved so that tasks are separated (1) |
| People want to control their information (1) | |
| Researchers using identifiable information without consent is intrusive (1) | Researchers will be dealing with de-identified data eventually (1) |
| Acceptable depending on study (1) | |
| Consent required when participants are experiencing mental health issues, as they may not welcome people delving into their affairs at that point in their lives (1) | Consent would have been given at data collection point (1) |
| Information given to WorkCover can be shared with researchers, as it was given confidentially (1) | |
| Consent should be sought for all research (1) | Retrospective use of data does not require consent (1) |
| Consent should be sought at initial point of data collection (1) | People have inflated view of how interesting they are to others (1) |
| Collecting this kind of information without consent may not be legal (1) | |
| It is very good to obtain consent if it is simple to do so (1) | |
aBracketed numbers reveal the number of participants offering each justification