Abstract

The collection and use of patient health data are central to any kind of activity in the health care system. These data may be produced during routine clinical processes or obtained directly from the patient using patient-reported outcome (PRO) measures. Although efficiency and other reasons justify data availability for a range of potentially relevant uses, these data are nearly always collected for a single specific purpose. The health care literature reflects this narrow scope, and there is limited literature on the joint use of health data for daily clinical use, clinical research, surveillance, and administrative purposes. The aim of this paper is to provide a framework for discussing the efficient use of health data with a specific focus on the role of PRO measures. PRO data may be used at an individual patient level to inform patient care or shared decision making and to tailor care to individual needs or group-level needs as a complement to health record data, such as that on mortality and readmission, in order to inform service delivery and measure the real-world effectiveness of treatment. PRO measures may be used either for their own sake, to provide valuable information from the patient perspective, or as a proxy for clinical data that would otherwise not be feasible to collect. We introduce a framework to analyze any health care activity that involves health data. The framework consists of four data processes (patient identification, data collection, data aggregation and data use), further structured into two dichotomous dimensions in each data process (level: group vs patient; timeframe: ad hoc vs systematic). This framework is used to analyze various health activities with respect to joint use of data, considering the technical, legal, organizational, and logistical challenges that characterize each data process. Finally, we propose a model for joint use of health data with data collected during follow-up as a base. Demands for health data will continue to increase, which will further add to the need for the concerted use and reuse of PRO data for parallel purposes. Repeated and uncoordinated PRO data collection for the same patient for different purposes results in misuse of resources for the patient and the health care system as well as reduced response rates owing to questionnaire fatigue. PRO data can be routinely collected both at the hospital (from inpatients as well as outpatients) and outside of hospital settings; in primary or social care settings; or in the patient’s home, provided the health informatics infrastructure is in place. In the future, clinical settings are likely to be a prominent source of PRO data; however, we are also likely to see increased remote collection of PRO data by patients in their own home (telePRO). Data collection for research and quality surveillance will have to adapt to this circumstance and adopt complementary data capture methods that take advantage of the utility of PRO data collected during daily clinical practice. The European Union’s regulation with respect to the protection of personal data—General Data Protection Regulation—imposes severe restrictions on the use of health data for parallel purposes, and steps should be taken to alleviate the consequences while still protecting personal data against misuse.

Highlights

  • Health information is central to all types of activities in the health care system, all of which involve collecting, analyzing, or using health information [1]

  • We have introduced a model for health data with four data processes, each dividable with respect to timeframe and group level, which distinguishes properties relevant to the discussion of joint use across different purposes and supports consideration of the associated organizational and technological challenges

  • We propose a model for joint use of health data, with data collected during follow-up as the backbone

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Summary

Introduction

Health information is central to all types of activities in the health care system, all of which involve collecting, analyzing, or using health information [1]. Securing personal data against misuse is the background for several legal initiatives, for instance, the implementation of the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) [2]. One key element of this regulation is the principle that personal data collected for one purpose may not be immediately transferred and used for other purposes. While misuse of personal data poses a severe ethical problem, so does waste and duplicate collection of the same data from the same patients due to legal, organizational, and technical dysfunction. From the patient’s perspective, duplicate collection of data may be unnecessarily burdensome and time consuming, and the possibilities and advantages of alternative uses of health data should be considered. We have discussed the patient’s perspective of joint use in more detail elsewhere [3]

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