| Literature DB >> 28476723 |
Joseph Ali1,2, Alain B Labrique2, Kara Gionfriddo1, George Pariyo2, Dustin G Gibson2, Bridget Pratt2,3, Molly Deutsch-Feldman4, Adnan A Hyder1,2.
Abstract
Mobile phone coverage has grown, particularly within low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), presenting an opportunity to augment routine health surveillance programs. Several LMICs and global health partners are seeking opportunities to launch basic mobile phone-based surveys of noncommunicable diseases (NCDs). The increasing use of such technology in LMICs brings forth a cluster of ethical challenges; however, much of the existing literature regarding the ethics of mobile or digital health focuses on the use of technologies in high-income countries and does not consider directly the specific ethical issues associated with the conduct of mobile phone surveys (MPS) for NCD risk factor surveillance in LMICs. In this paper, we explore conceptually several of the central ethics issues in this domain, which mainly track the three phases of the MPS process: predata collection, during data collection, and postdata collection. These include identifying the nature of the activity; stakeholder engagement; appropriate design; anticipating and managing potential harms and benefits; consent; reaching intended respondents; data ownership, access and use; and ensuring LMIC sustainability. We call for future work to develop an ethics framework and guidance for the use of mobile phones for disease surveillance globally. ©Joseph Ali, Alain B Labrique, Kara Gionfriddo, George Pariyo, Dustin G Gibson, Bridget Pratt, Molly Deutsch-Feldman, Adnan A Hyder. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (http://www.jmir.org), 05.05.2017.Entities:
Keywords: bioethics; ethics; mHealth; mobile phone survey; noncommunicable diseases; research ethics
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28476723 PMCID: PMC5438462 DOI: 10.2196/jmir.7326
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Suggested ethics consideration in mobile phone survey (MPS) of noncommunicable disease (NCD) risk factors by phase.
| Issues | Key considerations or questions | Available options (indicative) | |
| Defining the activity | Does the activity constitute research, M&E, and/or surveillance? | Nature of activity is defined by independent persons | |
| Who defines the nature of the activity? | Criteria to distinguish types of MPSb are established and applied | ||
| What ethical requirements follow? | |||
| Stakeholder engagement | What are the ethical goals of engagement? | Identify local norms and practices associated with the use of mobile phones | |
| Who should be engaged? | Determine the social, cultural, legal, and public health significance of the information being collected | ||
| How and when should stakeholders be engaged? | Identify stakeholders, for example, technical experts, community representatives, health system agents, donor agency representatives | ||
| Appropriate design | How should the survey be delivered? What qualities of survey delivery will affect the respondent and data validity? | Align delivery method with population characteristics, for example, if low literacy, IVR may be preferred | |
| Does the delivery method influence social desirability bias? | Use all major languages commonly used in other traditional surveys | ||
| Linguistic strategy: how many and which languages ought to be used to administer the survey? | |||
| Anticipating potential harms and benefits | What are the potential burdens or risks of participating in a MPS program (at the individual, community, national levels)? | User-testing, interviews, and focus groups to identify key sensitive issues and design survey taking these into account | |
| What are the potential benefits or advantages of participating in a MPS program (at the individual, community, national levels)? | |||
| What strategies will minimize harms and maximize benefits? | |||
| How will harms or benefits be balanced for disadvantaged and marginalized groups? | |||
| Consent | What information about the MPS should be | Disclose information consistent with | |
| How should respondents | Review local practices, population preferences, and legal permissibility of different opt-in or opt-out approaches | ||
| Should types of disclosure and authorization differ based on the MPS delivery method (IVR or CATI or SMS or mixed modality) and population? | |||
| Reaching intended respondents | Which MPS sampling and recruitment methods best reduce unnecessary burdens upon intended and unintended MPS recipients? | Take stock of other existing survey approaches in designing MPS delivery strategies | |
| What approach to MPS incentive delivery is most appropriate? | Conduct follow up surveys by human caller on limited sample to verify | ||
| Are existing laws likely to make it difficult to reach respondents using MPS? | Consult local regulatory authorities to identify and address potential areas of concern | ||
| Data ownership, access and use | To whom do the data belong? | Establish advance agreements to guide terms of data ownership, access, and use | |
| What data can be shared? | Consider restrictions on data access and use for purposes that do not advance public health | ||
| Who should have access to the data? | |||
| How should the data be shared? | |||
| To what uses can the data be put? | |||
| Ensuring LMICg sustainability | What are different actors’ responsibilities to promote and advance local sustainability? | Agree upon sustainability and capacity development commitments in advance | |
| Who is responsible for deciding who is allocated which strategies to undertake? | Identify core areas of local need and strength | ||
| Should ongoing MPS efforts be supported only in the original data collection area or more broadly? | Integrate with existing programs and approaches where available | ||
aIRB: institutional review board.
bMPS: mobile phone survey.
cIVR: interactive voice response.
dCATI: computer-assisted telephone interview.
eSMS: short message service.
fNCD: noncommunicable disease.
gLMIC: low- and middle-income country.
Mobile phone survey (MPS) consent authorization options and examples.
| Options | Opt-in | Opt-out |
| Active | “press 1 if you would like to continue the survey” | “press 2 if you do |
| Passive | “by completing this survey you agree to participate” | “the survey will automatically end if you do not respond to a question within 1 min” |