Data sharing in the age of predictive psychiatry: an adolescent perspective.

IF 6.6 2区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY
Gabriela Pavarini, Aleksandra Yosifova, Keying Wang, Benjamin Wilcox, Nastja Tomat, Jessica Lorimer, Lasara Kariyawasam, Leya George, Sonia Alí, Ilina Singh
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Background: Advances in genetics and digital phenotyping in psychiatry have given rise to testing services targeting young people, which claim to predict psychiatric outcomes before difficulties emerge. These services raise several ethical challenges surrounding data sharing and information privacy.

Objectives: This study aimed to investigate young people's interest in predictive testing for mental health challenges and their attitudes towards sharing biological, psychosocial and digital data for such purpose.

Methods: Eighty UK adolescents aged 16-18 years took part in a digital role-play where they played the role of clients of a fictional predictive psychiatry company and chose what sources of personal data they wished to provide for a risk assessment. After the role-play, participants reflected on their choices during a peer-led interview.

Findings: Participants saw multiple benefits in predictive testing services, but were highly selective with regard to the type of data they were willing to share. Largely due to privacy concerns, digital data sources such as social media or Google search history were less likely to be shared than psychosocial and biological data, including school grades and one's DNA. Participants were particularly reluctant to share social media data with schools (but less so with health systems).

Conclusions: Emerging predictive psychiatric services are valued by young people; however, these services must consider privacy versus utility trade-offs from the perspective of different stakeholders, including adolescents.

Clinical implications: Respecting adolescents' need for transparency, privacy and choice in the age of digital phenotyping is critical to the responsible implementation of predictive psychiatric services.

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预测性精神病学时代的数据共享:青少年视角。
背景:精神病学中遗传学和数字表型的进步导致了针对年轻人的测试服务,这些服务声称可以在出现困难之前预测精神病学结果。这些服务在数据共享和信息隐私方面提出了一些道德挑战。目的:本研究旨在调查年轻人对心理健康挑战预测测试的兴趣,以及他们对为此目的共享生物、社会心理和数字数据的态度。方法:80名年龄在16-18岁的英国青少年参加了一个数字角色扮演,在这个角色扮演中,他们扮演一个虚构的预测精神病学公司的客户,并选择他们希望提供的个人数据来源进行风险评估。在角色扮演之后,参与者在同伴主导的面试中反思他们的选择。研究结果:参与者看到了预测测试服务的多重好处,但对于他们愿意分享的数据类型有很高的选择性。很大程度上出于隐私考虑,社交媒体或谷歌搜索历史等数字数据源不太可能与社会心理和生物数据(包括学校成绩和DNA)共享。参与者尤其不愿意与学校分享社交媒体数据(但不太愿意与卫生系统分享)。结论:新兴的预测性精神病学服务受到年轻人的重视;然而,这些服务必须从不同利益相关者(包括青少年)的角度考虑隐私与效用之间的权衡。临床意义:在数字表现型时代,尊重青少年对透明度、隐私和选择的需求对于负责任地实施预测性精神病学服务至关重要。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
18.10
自引率
7.70%
发文量
31
期刊介绍: Evidence-Based Mental Health alerts clinicians to important advances in treatment, diagnosis, aetiology, prognosis, continuing education, economic evaluation and qualitative research in mental health. Published by the British Psychological Society, the Royal College of Psychiatrists and the BMJ Publishing Group the journal surveys a wide range of international medical journals applying strict criteria for the quality and validity of research. Clinicians assess the relevance of the best studies and the key details of these essential studies are presented in a succinct, informative abstract with an expert commentary on its clinical application.Evidence-Based Mental Health is a multidisciplinary, quarterly publication.
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