Participant Evaluation of Blockchain-Enhanced Women's Health Research Apps: Mixed Methods Experimental Study.

IF 5.4 2区 医学 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Madelena Y Ng, Jodi Halpern, Olivia Shane, Tina Teng, Michael Nguyễn, Casey Ryan Alt, Anaïs Barthe Leite, Sean Moss-Pultz, Courtney R Lyles, Coye Cheshire
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Blockchain technology has capabilities that can transform how sensitive personal health data are safeguarded, shared, and accessed in digital health research. Women's health data are considered especially sensitive, given the privacy and safety risks associated with their unauthorized disclosure. These risks may affect research participation. Using a privacy-by-design approach, we developed 2 app-based women's health research study prototypes for user evaluation and assessed how blockchain may impact participation.

Objective: This study aims to seek the perspectives of women to understand whether applications of blockchain technology in app-based digital research would affect their decision to participate and contribute sensitive personal health data.

Methods: A convergent, mixed methods, experimental design was used to evaluate participant perceptions and attitudes toward using 2 app-based women's health research study prototypes with blockchain features. Prototype A was based on the status quo ResearchKit framework and had extensive electronic informed consent, while prototype B minimized study onboarding requirements and had no informed consent; the mechanisms of how the contributed data flowed and were made pseudonymous were the same. User evaluations were carried out in February and March 2021 and consisted of a think-aloud protocol, a perception survey, and a semistructured interview. Findings were mapped to the technology acceptance model to guide interpretation.

Results: We recruited 16 representative female participants from 175 respondents. User evaluations revealed that while participants considered prototype B easier to use on intuitive navigation (theme 1) of specified tasks and comprehension (theme 2) of research procedures, prototype A trended toward being perceived more favorably than prototype B across most perception survey constructs, with an overall lower level of privacy concern (mean [SD]: 2.22 [1.10] vs 2.95 [1.29]) and perceived privacy risk (2.92 [1.46] vs 3.64 [1.73]) and higher level of perceived privacy (5.21 [1.26] vs 4.79 [1.47]), trust (5.46 [1.19] vs 4.76 [1.27]), and usability (67.81 [21.77] vs 64.84 [23.69]). Prototype B was perceived more favorably than prototype A with perceived control (4.92 [1.32] vs 4.89 [1.29]) and perceived ownership (5.18 [0.59] vs 5.01 [0.96]). These constructs, except for perceived ownership, were significantly correlated with behavioral intention to use the app (P<.05). Participants perceived the usefulness of these prototypes in relation to the value of research study to women's health field (theme 3), the value of research study to self (theme 4), and the value of blockchain features for participation (theme 5).

Conclusions: This study provides nuanced insights into how blockchain applications in app-based research remain secondary in value to participants' expectations of health research, and hence their intention to participate and contribute data. However, with impending data privacy and security concerns, it remains prudent to understand how to best integrate blockchain technology in digital health research infrastructure.

背景:区块链技术能够改变数字健康研究中敏感个人健康数据的保护、共享和访问方式。妇女的健康数据被认为特别敏感,因为未经授权的披露会带来隐私和安全风险。这些风险可能会影响研究的参与。利用隐私设计方法,我们开发了 2 个基于应用程序的女性健康研究原型供用户评估,并评估了区块链可能对参与研究产生的影响:本研究旨在从女性的角度出发,了解区块链技术在基于应用程序的数字研究中的应用是否会影响她们参与研究和提供敏感个人健康数据的决定:本研究采用聚合、混合方法和实验设计,评估参与者对使用两个具有区块链功能的基于应用程序的女性健康研究原型的看法和态度。原型 A 基于现状的 ResearchKit 框架,有大量电子知情同意书,而原型 B 将研究入门要求降至最低,没有知情同意书;贡献数据的流动和匿名机制相同。用户评估于 2021 年 2 月和 3 月进行,包括 "畅想协议"、"感知调查 "和 "半结构式访谈"。评估结果与技术接受度模型相对应,以指导解释:我们从 175 名受访者中招募了 16 名具有代表性的女性参与者。用户评价显示,虽然参与者认为原型 B 在指定任务的直观导航(主题 1)和研究程序的理解(主题 2)方面更易于使用,但在大多数感知调查项目中,原型 A 的感知趋势比原型 B 更佳,对隐私的关注程度总体较低(平均值 [SD]: 2.22 [1.10] vs 2.95 [1.29])和感知到的隐私风险(2.92 [1.46] vs 3.64 [1.73]),以及更高水平的感知隐私(5.21 [1.26] vs 4.79 [1.47])、信任(5.46 [1.19] vs 4.76 [1.27])和可用性(67.81 [21.77] vs 64.84 [23.69])。在控制感(4.92 [1.32] vs 4.89 [1.29])和拥有感(5.18 [0.59] vs 5.01 [0.96])方面,用户对原型 B 的评价高于原型 A。除感知到的所有权外,这些因素都与使用应用程序的行为意向有显著相关性(结论:本研究提供了对用户使用应用程序的行为意向的细微洞察:本研究提供了细致入微的见解,让我们了解区块链应用在基于应用程序的研究中的价值,对于参与者对健康研究的期望以及他们参与研究和贡献数据的意愿而言,仍然是次要的。然而,由于数据隐私和安全问题迫在眉睫,了解如何将区块链技术最好地整合到数字健康研究基础设施中仍是一个谨慎的问题。
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来源期刊
JMIR mHealth and uHealth
JMIR mHealth and uHealth Medicine-Health Informatics
CiteScore
12.60
自引率
4.00%
发文量
159
审稿时长
10 weeks
期刊介绍: JMIR mHealth and uHealth (JMU, ISSN 2291-5222) is a spin-off journal of JMIR, the leading eHealth journal (Impact Factor 2016: 5.175). JMIR mHealth and uHealth is indexed in PubMed, PubMed Central, and Science Citation Index Expanded (SCIE), and in June 2017 received a stunning inaugural Impact Factor of 4.636. The journal focusses on health and biomedical applications in mobile and tablet computing, pervasive and ubiquitous computing, wearable computing and domotics. JMIR mHealth and uHealth publishes since 2013 and was the first mhealth journal in Pubmed. It publishes even faster and has a broader scope with including papers which are more technical or more formative/developmental than what would be published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research.
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