隐私法规和公共卫生障碍

Manag. Sci. Pub Date : 2022-11-11 DOI:10.2139/ssrn.3983334
J. Buckman, Idris Adjerid, Catherine Tucker
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引用次数: 1

摘要

新冠肺炎大流行已造成数百万人死亡,严重扰乱了世界经济。一种安全有效的疫苗研制得非常迅速,但到目前为止,疫苗的吸收速度很慢。本文探讨了延迟采用疫苗的一个潜在解释,即数据隐私问题。我们探讨了美国各州不同的两项截然不同的法规,这些法规有可能影响与接种COVID-19疫苗相关的感知隐私风险。第一条规定——“身份要求”——通过要求个人用政府批准的文件来验证居住权,增加了对隐私的担忧。第二项规定——“匿名保护”——允许个人从国家运营的免疫登记系统中删除个人身份信息,从而减少了对隐私的担忧。我们调查了这些隐私减少和隐私保护法规对美国州一级COVID-19疫苗接种率的影响。使用面板数据集,我们发现识别要求减少了疫苗需求,但当个人能够从免疫登记中删除信息时,这种负面影响被抵消。在控制cdc定义的疫苗接种障碍、错误信息水平、疫苗激励措施和各州分阶段分配疫苗供应的情况下,我们的结果保持一致。这些发现为隐私政策和公共卫生提供了重要的理论和实践贡献。这篇论文被信息系统的David Simchi-Levi接受。补充材料:数据和电子伴侣可在https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2022.4580上获得。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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Privacy Regulation and Barriers to Public Health
The COVID-19 pandemic has killed millions and gravely disrupted the world’s economy. A safe and effective vaccine was developed remarkably swiftly, but as of yet, uptake of the vaccine has been slow. This paper explores one potential explanation of delayed adoption of the vaccine, which is data privacy concerns. We explore two contrasting regulations that vary across U.S. states that have the potential to affect the perceived privacy risk associated with receiving a COVID-19 vaccine. The first regulation—an “identification requirement”—increases privacy concerns by requiring individuals to verify residency with government approved documentation. The second regulation—“anonymity protection”—reduces privacy concerns by allowing individuals to remove personally identifying information from state-operated immunization registry systems. We investigate the effects of these privacy-reducing and privacy-protecting regulations on U.S. state-level COVID-19 vaccination rates. Using a panel data set, we find that identification requirements decrease vaccine demand but that this negative effect is offset when individuals are able to remove information from an immunization registry. Our results remain consistent when controlling for CDC-defined barriers to vaccination, levels of misinformation, vaccine incentives, and states’ phased distribution of vaccine supply. These findings yield significant theoretical and practical contributions for privacy policy and public health. This paper was accepted by David Simchi-Levi, information systems. Supplemental Material: Data and the e-companion are available at https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2022.4580 .
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