Abstract

BackgroundEngland operates a National Data Opt-Out (NDOO) for the secondary use of confidential health data for research and planning. We hypothesised that public awareness and support for the secondary use of health data and the NDOO would vary by participant demography and healthcare experience. We explored patient/public awareness and perceptions of secondary data use, grouping potential researchers into National Health Service (NHS), academia or commercial. We assessed awareness of the NDOO system amongst patients, carers, healthcare staff and the public. We co-developed recommendations to consider when sharing unconsented health data for research.MethodsA patient and public engagement program, co-created and including patient and public workshops, questionnaires and discussion groups regarding anonymised health data use.ResultsThere were 350 participants in total. Central concerns for health data use included unauthorised data re-use, the potential for discrimination and data sharing without patient benefit. 94% of respondents were happy for their data to be used for NHS research, 85% for academic research and 68% by health companies, but less than 50% for non-healthcare companies and opinions varied with demography and participant group.Questionnaires showed that knowledge of the NDOO was low, with 32% of all respondents, 53% of all NHS staff and 29% of all patients aware of the NDOO.Recommendations to guide unconsented secondary health data use included that health data use should benefit patients; data sharing decisions should involve patients/public. That data should remain in close proximity to health services with the principles of data minimisation applied. Further, that there should be transparency in secondary health data use, including publicly available lists of projects, summaries and benefits. Finally, organisations involved in data access decisions should participate in programmes to increase knowledge of the NDOO, to ensure public members were making informed choices about their own data.ConclusionThe majority of participants in this study reported that the use of healthcare data for secondary purposes was acceptable when accessed by NHS. Academic and health-focused companies. However, awareness was limited, including of the NDOO. Further development of publicly-agreed recommendations for secondary health data use may improve both awareness and confidence in secondary health data use.

Highlights

  • The National Health Service (NHS) is a single publiclyfunded health service for the United Kingdom (UK) which is free at the point of need to the entire population

  • The majority of participants in this study reported that the use of healthcare data for secondary purposes was acceptable when accessed by NHS

  • We report a patient and publicly created and delivered series of activities including > 350 people; with young adults, patients, NHS staff and the public; to assess concerns, knowledge and acceptance of data sharing

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The National Health Service (NHS) is a single publiclyfunded health service for the United Kingdom (UK) which is free at the point of need to the entire population. Previous research suggests there is general support for sharing confidential health data for research and planning [8] but there are public concerns [2, 9, 10], especially where data is not fully anonymised or made available for commercial use [8, 11]. This was recently highlighted [12] with 2080 UK citizens who responded to an online survey reporting they were willing to share their data in the following percentages; with academic or medical research institutions (50.3%); a pharmaceutical company (19.8%) or a tech company with an aim to improve health care (12.2%). We co-developed recommendations to consider when sharing unconsented health data for research

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call