| Literature DB >> 29592847 |
Mary P Tully1,2, Kyle Bozentko3, Sarah Clement4, Amanda Hunn5, Lamiece Hassan1, Ruth Norris1, Malcolm Oswald6,7, Niels Peek1,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The secondary use of health data for research raises complex questions of privacy and governance. Such questions are ill-suited to opinion polling where citizens must choose quickly between multiple-choice answers based on little information.Entities:
Keywords: confidentiality; data linkage; medical research; national health services; patient engagement; privacy; public opinion; public participation; public policy, decision making, organizational
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29592847 PMCID: PMC5895919 DOI: 10.2196/jmir.7763
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
A priori criteria for jury selection and demographics of actual jurors.
| Criteria | UK census (%)a | Jury target range | Achieved in jury 1 and 2b | |
| Women | 51 | 8-10 jurors | 8 and 9 jurors | |
| Men | 49 | 8-10 jurors | 9 and 8 jurors | |
| 18-29 | 21 | 2-5 jurors | 5 and 3 jurors | |
| 30-44 | 26 | 3-6 jurors | 4 and 6 jurors | |
| 45-59 | 25 | 3-6 jurors | 5 and 5 jurors | |
| 60+ | 28 | 4-7 jurors | 3 and 3 jurors | |
| White | 85 | 14-17 jurors | 14 and 14 jurors | |
| Groups other than white | 15 | 2-4 jurors | 3 and 3 jurors | |
| Level 1 or no qualifications | 36 | 5-8 jurors | 6 and 7 jurors | |
| Level 2 or level 3 qualifications (apprenticeship and other qualifications) | 37 | 5-8 jurors | 6 and 5 jurors | |
| Level 4 qualifications (degree level) and above | 27 | 4-6 jurors | 5 and 5 jurors | |
| Agree more with a) than b) | 52 | 7-11 jurors | 9 and 10 jurors | |
| Agree more with b) than with a) | 34 | 5-7 jurors | 5 and 6 jurors | |
| Agree equally with both or don’t agree with either or don’t know | 14 | 1-4 jurors | 3 and 1 jurors | |
a[19].
b1 person left each jury at the end of the first day and are not reported here.
cTarget sample percentages based on “Perceptions of Data Sharing” survey [20]—see Textbox 2 for full text.
Perspectives taken and information provided by impartial and partial witnesses who presented to both juries.
| Witnesses | Perspective taken | Information provided | |
| Dr Ralph Sullivan, general practitioner and medical informatician | To explain what is in a patient record, and how patient records are used in the NHS. | General Medical Council requirements for record keeping, content of multiple patient records, and how they are used in practice both for direct care and secondary uses | |
| Dawn Monaghan, group manager for public services at the Information Commissioner’s Office | To tell jurors a little about the law that protects access to patient records. | Outline of relevant privacy law, (common law duty of confidence and Data Protection Act 1998), how data are protected, and limitations to access to data | |
| Dr John Ainsworth, senior research fellow at the University of Manchester | To argue that it’s important that patient records are used for research and other purposes that bring benefits to the public. | How data are used to create medical evidence as to the effectiveness and safety of treatment in the public interest | |
| Sam Smith, medConfidential coordinator | Oo make the case for stronger control over access to patient records and better information and choices for patients about the use of patient records. | Risks of reidentification, differences between opt out and opt in, uses of data for decommissioning services, and misuse by commercial companies. Argued the case for greater control of patient records | |
| Professor Søren Holm, professor of bioethics at the University of Manchester | Ethical arguments for patients controlling access to patient records, and ethical arguments for wider use of patient records for the benefit of the public. | Potential benefits of sharing data, problems with sharing data, and difficulties with specific informed consent models. How these conflicting interests can be reconciled. Identified ethical considerations both for patients sharing and for patients controlling patient records for uses other than direct patient care | |
Results from pre- and postjury questionnaires for jury mission question 1 completed individually by jurors, including changes in opinions. “Change” indicates previous answer to new answer. NHS: National Health Service.
| Question and answer options | Jury 1 (n) | Jury 2 (n) | |||||||
| Prejury | Change | Postjury | Change | Prejury | Change | Postjury | Change | ||
| a. Yes, but they should publish information about what they plan to do | 2 | a→b (2) | 2 | b→a (2) | 0 | 2 | b→a (2) | ||
| b. Yes, but they should publish information about what they plan to do and patients should be able to opt out | 8 | b→a (2); b→b (6) | 13 | a→b (2); b→b (6); c→b (5) | 12 | b→a (2); b→b (7); b→c (2); b→e (1) | 10 | b→b (7); c→b (3) | |
| c. Yes, but they should publish information about what they plan to do and only create records for patients who opt in | 6 | c→b (5); c→c (1) | 1 | c→c (1) | 4 | c→b (3); c→e (1) | 3 | b→c (2); e→c (1) | |
| d. No | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||||
| e. Other | 1 | e→e (1) | 1 | e→e (1) | 1 | e→c (1) | 2 | b→e (1); c→e (1) | |
Results from pre- and post-jury questionnaires for jury mission question 2 completed individually by jurors, including changes in opinions. “Change” indicates previous answer to new answer. Y=organization should be granted access; N=organization should not be granted access. NHS: National Health Service.
| Question and answer options | Jury 1 (n) | Jury 2 (n) | ||||||||||
| Prejury | Change | Postjury | Change | Prejury | Change | Postjury | Change | |||||
| Yes | 10 | Y→Y (10) | 15 | Y→Y (10); N→Y (5) | 7 | Y→Y (7) | 17 | Y→Y (7); N→Y (10) | ||||
| No | 7 | N→Y (5); N→N (2) | 2 | N→N (2) | 10 | N→Y (10) | 0 | |||||
| Yes | 15 | Y→Y (13); Y→N (2) | 15 | Y→Y (13); N→Y (2) | 14 | Y→Y (14) | 17 | Y→Y (14); N→Y (3) | ||||
| No | 2 | N→Y (2) | 2 | Y→N (2) | 3 | N→Y (3) | 0 | |||||
| Yes | 9 | Y→Y (8); Y→N (1) | 15 | Y→Y (8); N→Y (7) | 14 | Y→Y (11); Y→N (3) | 14 | Y→Y (11); N→Y (3) | ||||
| No | 8 | N→Y (7); N→N (1) | 2 | Y→N (1); N→N (1) | 3 | N→Y (3) | 3 | Y→N (3) | ||||
| Yes | 4 | Y→Y (3); Y→N (1) | 10 | Y→Y (3); N→Y (7) | 6 | Y→Y (3); Y→N (3) | 6 | Y→Y (3); N→Y (3) | ||||
| No | 13 | N→Y (7); N→N (6) | 7 | N→N (6); Y→N (1) | 11 | N→Y (3); N→N (8) | 11 | N→N (8); Y→N (3) | ||||
| Yes | 5 | Y→Y (5) | 10 | Y→Y (5); N→Y (5) | 1 | Y→Y (1) | 6 | Y→Y (1); N→Y (5) | ||||
| No | 12 | N→Y (5); N→N (7) | 7 | N→N (7) | 16 | N→Y (5); N→N (11) | 11 | N→N (11) | ||||
| Yes | 2 | Y→Y (1); Y→N (1) | 3 | Y→Y (1); N→Y (2) | 0 | 1 | N→Y (1) | |||||
| No | 15 | N→Y (2); N→N (13) | 14 | N→N (13); Y→N (1) | 17 | N→Y (1); N→N (16) | 16 | N→N (16) | ||||
| Yes | 7 | Y→Y (7) | 12 | Y→Y (7); N→Y (5) | 5 | Y→Y (4); Y→N (1) | 10 | Y→Y (4); N→Y (6) | ||||
| No | 10 | N→Y (5); N→N (5) | 5 | N→N (5) | 12 | N→Y (6); N→N (6) | 7 | N→N (6); Y→N (1) | ||||
Figure 1Numbers of jurors who changed their answers to question 1 of the jury mission.
Votes on subquestions of the jury mission completed during the writing of the jury report. NHS: National Health Service.
| Questions and answer options | Jury 1 | Jury 2 | |
| Yes | 17 | 13 | |
| No | 0 | 4 | |
| Publish only | 8 | 5 | |
| Patient option | 9 | 12 | |
| Opt in | 1 | 5 | |
| Opt out | 16 | 12 | |