Waving away waivers: an obligation to contribute to ‘herd knowledge’ for data linkage research?

IF 2.2 Q2 ETHICS Research Ethics Pub Date : 2021-11-24 DOI:10.1177/17470161211058311
Owen M. Bradfield
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Abstract

In today’s online data-driven world, people constantly shed data and deposit digital footprints. When individuals access health services, governments and health providers collect and store large volumes of health information about people that can later be retrieved, linked and analysed for research purposes. This can lead to new discoveries in medicine and healthcare. In addition, when securely stored and de-identified, the privacy risks are minimal and manageable. In many jurisdictions, ethics committees routinely waive the requirement for researchers to obtain consent from data subjects before using and linking these datasets in an effort to balance respect for individuals with research efficiency. In this paper, I explore the ethical justification for using routinely collected health data for research without consent. I conclude that, not only is this morally justified but also that data subjects have a moral obligation to contribute their data to such research, which would obviate the need for ethics committees to consider consent waivers. In justifying this argument, I look to the duty of easy rescue, distributive justice and draw analogies with vaccination ethics.
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放弃豁免:为数据链接研究贡献“群体知识”的义务?
在当今网络数据驱动的世界里,人们不断地流出数据,留下数字足迹。当个人获得卫生服务时,政府和卫生服务提供者收集和存储大量有关个人的卫生信息,这些信息以后可以检索、链接和分析,用于研究目的。这可能会导致医学和医疗保健领域的新发现。此外,当安全存储和去识别时,隐私风险是最小的和可管理的。在许多司法管辖区,伦理委员会通常不要求研究人员在使用和链接这些数据集之前获得数据主体的同意,以努力平衡对个人的尊重和研究效率。在本文中,我探讨了未经同意使用常规收集的健康数据进行研究的伦理理由。我的结论是,这不仅在道德上是合理的,而且数据主体有道德义务将他们的数据贡献给此类研究,这将消除伦理委员会考虑同意弃权的必要性。在证明这一论点的合理性时,我着眼于容易拯救的责任、分配正义,并将其与疫苗接种伦理进行类比。
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来源期刊
Research Ethics
Research Ethics Arts and Humanities-Philosophy
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
11.80%
发文量
17
审稿时长
15 weeks
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