医生对监控的看法:COVID-19 的可穿戴设备、应用程序和聊天机器人。

Alexandra R Linares, Katrina A Bramstedt, Mohan M Chilukuri, P Murali Doraiswamy
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景和目的:了解全球医生群体对使用数字工具进行 COVID-19 公共卫生监测和自我监测的看法:2020 年 9 月 9 日至 15 日期间,在医生网络平台 Sermo 上进行了横向、随机、分层调查。我们的目标是在美国、欧盟和世界其他地区抽样调查 1000 名医生。调查就数字化工具的风险收益比以及数据隐私和信任问题向医生提出了问题:描述性统计按年龄组、性别、一线地位和地理区域对医生的特征和观点进行了分析。P<0.05的方差分析、t检验和卡方检验被视为质的差异。由于这是一项探索性研究,我们没有对小区规模较小或多重性进行调整。我们使用了 JMP Pro 15 (SAS) 和 Protobi.Results:有 1004 名医生完成了调查,他们的平均年龄(标准差)为 49.14 (12)岁。对自我监测智能手表(66%)和接触追踪应用程序(66%)的热情最高,对其他工具的热情略低(48-56%)。受访者对医疗机构的信任度最高(68%),对技术公司的信任度最低(30%)。大多数受访者(69.8%)认为,为抗击大流行而放松隐私标准会导致未来滥用隐私:这项调查为了解医生对监控的看法提供了重要依据。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Physician perceptions of surveillance: Wearables, Apps, and Chatbots for COVID-19.

Physician perceptions of surveillance: Wearables, Apps, and Chatbots for COVID-19.

Physician perceptions of surveillance: Wearables, Apps, and Chatbots for COVID-19.

Background and purpose: To characterize the global physician community's opinions on the use of digital tools for COVID-19 public health surveillance and self-surveillance.

Materials and methods: Cross-sectional, random, stratified survey done on Sermo, a physician networking platform, between September 9 and 15, 2020. We aimed to sample 1000 physicians divided among the USA, EU, and rest of the world. The survey questioned physicians on the risk-benefit ratio of digital tools, as well as matters of data privacy and trust.

Statistical analysis used: Descriptive statistics examined physicians' characteristics and opinions by age group, gender, frontline status, and geographic region. ANOVA, t-test, and Chi-square tests with P < 0.05 were viewed as qualitatively different. As this was an exploratory study, we did not adjust for small cell sizes or multiplicity. We used JMP Pro 15 (SAS), as well as Protobi.

Results: The survey was completed by 1004 physicians with a mean (standard deviation) age of 49.14 (12) years. Enthusiasm was highest for self-monitoring smartwatches (66%) and contact tracing apps (66%) and slightly lower (48-56%) for other tools. Trust was highest for health providers (68%) and lowest for technology companies (30%). Most respondents (69.8%) felt that loosening privacy standards to fight the pandemic would lead to misuse of privacy in the future.

Conclusion: The survey provides foundational insights into how physicians think of surveillance.

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