| Literature DB >> 34972126 |
Jessica Mozersky1, Tristan McIntosh1, Heidi A Walsh1, Meredith V Parsons1, Melody Goodman2, James M DuBois1.
Abstract
Qualitative health data are rarely shared in the United States (U.S.). This is unfortunate because gathering qualitative data is labor and time-intensive, and data sharing enables secondary research, training, and transparency. A new U.S. federal policy mandates data sharing by 2023, and is agnostic to data type. We surveyed U.S. qualitative researchers (N = 425) on the barriers and facilitators of sharing qualitative health or sensitive research data. Most researchers (96%) have never shared qualitative data in a repository. Primary concerns were lack of participant permission to share data, data sensitivity, and breaching trust. Researcher willingness to share would increase if participants agreed and if sharing increased the societal impact of their research. Key resources to increase willingness to share were funding, guidance, and de-identification assistance. Public health and biomedical researchers were most willing to share. Qualitative researchers need to prepare for this new reality as sharing qualitative data requires unique considerations.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34972126 PMCID: PMC8719660 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0261719
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Demographic information of survey respondents (N = 425).
| Demographic Questions | Percent | Count |
|---|---|---|
| Do you ever collect both quantitative data and qualitative data in the same research project? | ||
| Yes | 87% | 370 |
| No | 13% | 55 |
| Do you ever gather health information in your qualitative research, such as information about a participant’s diagnoses, symptoms, or treatments? | ||
| Yes | 71% | 301 |
| No | 29% | 124 |
| Do you ever gather other forms of sensitive information, such as information about illegal behaviors and sexual behaviors? | ||
| Yes | 48% | 206 |
| No | 52% | 219 |
| Which of the following methods do you use to gather qualitative research data? (check all that apply) | ||
| Interviews | 98% | 415 |
| Focus groups | 76% | 321 |
| Observations | 61% | 261 |
| Archival research | 39% | 165 |
| Town hall meetings or other deliberative methods | 22% | 94 |
| Other | 14% | 59 |
| Who has funded your research in the last 5 years? (check all that apply) | ||
| Your institution | 74% | 314 |
| Government agencies | 65% | 276 |
| Private foundations | 48% | 202 |
| Other | 8% | 35 |
| Corporations | 5% | 22 |
| Have you ever shared your qualitative research data with people outside of your research team? | ||
| No | 80% | 340 |
| Yes | 20% | 85 |
| Which of the following best describes how you shared your qualitative research data? (check all that apply) | ||
| Shared data with an individual outside of your research team | 76% | 65 |
| Deposited data with a data repository or archive | 18% | 15 |
| Other | 18% | 15 |
| If you have shared your qualitative data, what was the reason for doing so? (check all that apply) | ||
| To encourage new uses for my data | 59% | 50 |
| To promote new research collaborations | 58% | 49 |
| To show a commitment to openness | 33% | 28 |
| To increase the impact and visibility of my research findings | 31% | 26 |
| Other | 25% | 21 |
| A requirement of a funding agency | 16% | 14 |
| A requirement of a journal | 6% | 5 |
| A requirement of the institution | 7% | 6 |
| To shift the burden of maintaining and archiving my data to the repository | 2% | 2 |
N = 425.
*Question only applies to participants who have shared qualitative data previously (N = 85).
Concerns regarding qualitative data sharing.
| How concerned are you about the following factors related to the idea of sharing qualitative data through a repository? | Frequency of Participants Who Indicated Concern (%) |
|---|---|
| Lack of permission from research participants to share data. | 370 (87%) |
| The sensitivity of research data. | 360 (85%) |
| Breach of trust with participants. | 349 (82%) |
| IRB or institutional policies. | 336 (79%) |
| Concern that data cannot be adequately anonymized. | 334 (79%) |
| Losing control over who has access to my qualitative data. | 326 (77%) |
| The time and effort to prepare data for deposit. | 325 (76%) |
| The potential for misinterpretation of my data by other researchers. | 316 (74%) |
| Financial cost to prepare qualitative data for deposit. | 283 (67%) |
| Issues with legal permissions | 252 (59%) |
| Potential for repository technology failure. | 233 (55%) |
| My lack of knowledge about repositories and data sharing in general. | 223 (52%) |
| Others do not deserve to use data I collected. | 94 (22%) |
| I do not like the idea of others judging my work. | 74 (17%) |
Items were rated on a scale of 1 (not at all concerned), 2 (slightly concerned), 3 (moderately concerned), 4 (very concerned), or 5 (extremely concerned). Participants were considered to be concerned if they rated 3–5.
Considerations that would increase willingness to share.
| How likely would each of the following considerations increase your willingness to share qualitative data through a repository? | Frequency of Participants Willing to Share (%) |
|---|---|
| If sharing increased the societal impact of research. | 353 (83%) |
| If I knew my participants would agree to data sharing. | 339 (80%) |
| If sharing led to increased collaborations. | 322 (76%) |
| If sharing decreased the burden on participant communities. | 308 (72%) |
| If secondary data users needed to cite their data sources in all publications. | 294 (69%) |
| If data could be reused to explore new research questions. | 283 (67%) |
| If sharing made data from publicly-funded research more widely available. | 286 (67%) |
| If repositories provided a secure infrastructure for data storage. | 279 (66%) |
| If those who share data are invited to be co-authors on papers that use data. | 275 (65%) |
| If funding agencies required data to be shared. | 266 (63%) |
| If sharing helped avoid duplication of work. | 260 (61%) |
| If sharing data created the opportunity for students to learn how to analyze data. | 257 (60%) |
| If sharing allowed for verification of data interpretation. | 230 (54%) |
| If sharing positively influenced career promotion decisions. | 226 (53%) |
| If repositories provided a central catalog of available data sets. | 214 (50%) |
| If sharing led to increased citations. | 205 (48%) |
| If journals required data to be shared. | 201 (47%) |
The degree to which each consideration would increase willingness to share qualitative data were rated on a scale of 1 (not at all likely), 2 (somewhat unlikely), 3 (neutral), 4 (somewhat likely), or 5 (very likely). Participants were considered willing to share if they rated 4 or 5.
Resources to facilitate data sharing.
| How much would each of the following | Frequency of Participants Willing to Share (%) |
|---|---|
| If funding agencies would cover the cost of sharing qualitative data with a repository. | 294 (69%) |
| If you were given clear guidance on ethics and compliance-related issues. | 259 (61%) |
| If a data repository assisted with data anonymization. | 243 (57%) |
| If a data repository provided consultations regarding sharing qualitative data. | 207 (49%) |
The degree to which each resource would increase willingness to share qualitative data were rated on a scale of 1 (not at all), 2 (a little), 3 (a moderate amount), 4 (a lot) or 5 (a great deal). Participants were considered willing to share if they rated a 4 or 5.