在电子健康记录研究中平衡隐私、自主和科学需求。

Sharona Hoffman, Andy Podgurski
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摘要

正在进行的从纸质医疗档案到电子健康记录的过渡将为生物医学研究提供前所未有的大量数据,并有可能催化医学知识的重大进步。但是,只有当研究人员获得的数据能够代表整个患者群体时,这种潜力才能充分实现。因此,按照知情同意的传统观念,允许个别病人排除他们的健康信息,可能会损害研究事业及其产生的医疗效益。本文分析了从医学研究中实现社会效益与给予个人隐私偏好之间的紧张关系。它主张改变管理生物医学研究的概念和管理框架。当研究涉及电子记录审查而不是人体实验时,传统的自主主导模式应该让位于强调共同利益的模式。在基于记录的研究中,个人知情同意带来的有限好处成本太高——难以承受的行政负担、巨大的开支,以及产生扭曲研究结果的选择偏见的倾向。其他机制可以在不影响研究机会的情况下更好地保护数据主体的隐私和尊严利益。在本文中,我们制定了一个新颖的,多方面的方法来实现这些目标。这种方法认识到,实现身份隐藏和信息安全的技术手段是必要的,但不足以保护患者的医疗隐私,并在促进研究的同时培养公众信任。因此,我们呼吁通过以下方式来补充这些手段:(1)为基于记录的研究量身定制的监督过程,甚至适用于目前免于审查的去身份化患者记录;(2)关于此类研究的性质和潜在利益的公众通知和教育。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Balancing Privacy, Autonomy, and Scientific Needs In Electronic Health Records Research.

The ongoing transition from paper medical files to electronic health records will provide unprecedented amounts of data for biomedical research, with the potential to catalyze significant advances in medical knowledge. But this potential can be fully realized only if the data available to researchers is representative of the patient population as a whole. Thus, allowing individual patients to exclude their health information, in keeping with traditional notions of informed consent, may compromise the research enterprise and the medical benefits it produces. This Article analyzes the tension between realizing societal benefits from medical research and granting individual preferences for privacy. It argues for a shift in the conceptual and regulatory frameworks that govern biomedical research. When studies involve electronic record review rather than human experimentation, the traditional, autonomy-dominated model should give way to one that emphasizes the common good. In record-based studies, the limited benefits of individual informed consent come at too high a cost-difficult administrative burdens, significant expenses, and a tendency to create selection biases that distort study outcomes. Other mechanisms can better protect data subjects' privacy and dignitary interests without compromising research opportunities. In this Article, we formulate a novel, multi-faceted approach to achieve these ends. This approach recognizes that technical means for achieving identity concealment and information security are necessary but not sufficient to protect patients' medical privacy and to foster public trust while facilitating research. Hence, we call for supplementing such means with (1) an oversight process that is tailored to record-based research and applies even to de-identified patient records, which are currently exempt from scrutiny, and (2) public notice and education about the nature and potential benefits of such research.

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