Abstract
Digital health information systems (DHIS) are increasingly members of ecosystems, collecting, using and sharing a huge amount of personal health information (PHI), frequently without control and authorization through the data subject. From the data subject’s perspective, there is frequently no guarantee and therefore no trust that PHI is processed ethically in Digital Health Ecosystems. This results in new ethical, privacy and trust challenges to be solved. The authors’ objective is to find a combination of ethical principles, privacy and trust models, together enabling design, implementation of DHIS acting ethically, being trustworthy, and supporting the user’s privacy needs. Research published in journals, conference proceedings, and standards documents is analyzed from the viewpoint of ethics, privacy and trust. In that context, systems theory and systems engineering approaches together with heuristic analysis are deployed. The ethical model proposed is a combination of consequentialism, professional medical ethics and utilitarianism. Privacy enforcement can be facilitated by defining it as health information specific contextual intellectual property right, where a service user can express their own privacy needs using computer-understandable policies. Thereby, privacy as a dynamic, indeterminate concept, and computational trust, deploys linguistic values and fuzzy mathematics. The proposed solution, combining ethical principles, privacy as intellectual property and computational trust models, shows a new way to achieve ethically acceptable, trustworthy and privacy-enabling DHIS and Digital Health Ecosystems.
Highlights
IntroductionThe Digital Era evolution started about 30 years ago and continues at increasing speed
The Digital Era evolution started about 30 years ago and continues at increasing speed.This development has created global ecosystems characterized by ubiquitous use of digital technology such as computers, networks, platforms, clouds, algorithms and machine learning everywhere in society and business
The goal of this study is to develop a proposal for a combination of ethical privacy and trust approaches that enables the building of ethically acceptable and trustworthy Digital health information systems (DHIS) where the person or patient can set and enforce personal and context-aware privacy policies
Summary
The Digital Era evolution started about 30 years ago and continues at increasing speed This development has created global ecosystems characterized by ubiquitous use of digital technology such as computers, networks, platforms, clouds, algorithms and machine learning everywhere in society and business. They increasingly see personal information such as personal health information (PHI) as “new oil”, and collect, use and share it without limitations. This development has transformed the way health and health care services are provided and consumed.
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