| Literature DB >> 29785204 |
Eric D Perakslis1,2,3.
Abstract
Conducting research in a humanitarian setting requires quantifiable quality measures to ensure ethical study conduct. Digital health technologies are proven to improve research study quality and efficacy via automated data collection, improvement of data reliability, fidelity and resilience and by improved data provenance and traceability. Additionally, digital health methodologies can improve patient identity, patient privacy, study transparency, data sharing, competent informed consent, and the confidentiality and security of humanitarian operations. It can seem counterintuitive to press forward aggressively with digital technologies at a time of heightened population vulnerability and cyber security concerns, but new approaches are essential to meet the rapidly increasing demands of humanitarian research. In this paper we present the case for the digital modernization of humanitarian research in conflict and other humanitarian settings as a vehicle for improved research quality and ethics.Entities:
Keywords: Biometric identity; Data privacy; Data security; Data sharing; Digital health; Humanitarian research; Research ethics; eHealth; mHealth
Year: 2018 PMID: 29785204 PMCID: PMC5950196 DOI: 10.1186/s13031-018-0163-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Confl Health ISSN: 1752-1505 Impact factor: 2.723
Best Practices and Common Mistakes in Digital Healthcare Implementation
| Challenges in | Best Practices & Specific Methodologies |
|---|---|
| Poor or limited user involvement & engagement | User-centered design, user co-design, participatory design methodologies |
| Unclear goals, expectations & scope creep | Develop & use a clear requirements & expectations matrix |
| Poor sponsor participation & active leadership | Document specific sponsor role requirements & the corresponding relationships to other roles |
| Poor technology selection | Use an established technology selection framework |
| Lack of necessary technology skill sets | Understand the necessary roles & recruit, train or contract |
| Poor project management & lack of formal methodology | Understand & select from 6 most common technology delivery methodologies |
Association of Specific CIOMS Guidelines and Digital Technology Improvement Opportunities
| International Ethical Guideline (CIOMS) | Digital Enhancement Opportunities |
|---|---|
| Informed Consent (Guidelines 9,10,16) | Better comprehension via multi-media, improved privacy, traceability (including ability for withdrawal) & confidentiality |
| Collection Storage & Use of Data (Guidelines 11&12) | Improved Data Quality, Fidelity, Provenance, Data Reliability |
| Privacy and Confidentiality (Guidelines 3,4,11,12,20,22) | Digital Identity. Data Resilience, Data Redundancy |
| Data Transparency & Sharing (Guideline 8,12,22) | Increased Data and Study Transparency |