| Literature DB >> 32722749 |
Vignesh Subbian1,2, Anthony Solomonides3, Melissa Clarkson4, Vasiliki Nataly Rahimzadeh5, Carolyn Petersen6, Richard Schreiber7, Paul R DeMuro8, Prerna Dua9, Kenneth W Goodman10, Bonnie Kaplan11, Ross Koppel12,13, Christoph U Lehmann14, Eric Pan15, Yalini Senathirajah16.
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic response in the United States has exposed significant gaps in information systems and processes that prevent timely clinical and public health decision-making. Specifically, the use of informatics to mitigate the spread of SARS-CoV-2, support COVID-19 care delivery, and accelerate knowledge discovery bring to the forefront issues of privacy, surveillance, limits of state powers, and interoperability between public health and clinical information systems. Using a consensus-building process, we critically analyze informatics-related ethical issues in light of the pandemic across 3 themes: (1) public health reporting and data sharing, (2) contact tracing and tracking, and (3) clinical scoring tools for critical care. We provide context and rationale for ethical considerations and recommendations that are actionable during the pandemic and conclude with recommendations calling for longer-term, broader change (beyond the pandemic) for public health organization and policy reform.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; contact tracing; ethics; privacy; public health surveillance
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 32722749 PMCID: PMC7454584 DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocaa188
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Med Inform Assoc ISSN: 1067-5027 Impact factor: 4.497