Public attitudes towards the use of primary care patient record data in medical research without consent: a qualitative study
Open Access
- 10 February 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by BMJ in Journal of Medical Ethics
- Vol. 30 (1) , 104-109
- https://doi.org/10.1136/jme.2003.005157
Abstract
Objectives: Recent legislative changes within the United Kingdom have stimulated professional debate about access to patient data within research. However, there is currently little awareness of public views about such research. The authors sought to explore attitudes of the public, and their lay representatives, towards the use of primary care medical record data for research when patient consent was not being sought. Methods: 49 members of the public and four non-medical members of local community health councils in South Wales, UK gave their views on the value and acceptability of three current research scenarios, each describing access to data without patient consent. Results: Among focus group participants, awareness of research in primary care was low, and the appropriateness of general practitioners as researchers was questioned. There was general support for research but also concerns expressed about data collection without consent. These included lack of respect and patient control over the process. Unauthorised access to data by external agencies was a common fear. Current data collection practices, including population based disease registers elicited much anxiety. The key informants were equally critical of the scenarios and generally less accepting. Conclusions: This exploratory study has highlighted a number of areas of public concern when medical records are accessed for research without patient consent. Public acceptability regarding the use of medical records in research cannot simply be assumed. Further work is required to determine how widespread such views are and to inform those advising on confidentiality issues.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Some limits of informed consentJournal of Medical Ethics, 2003
- Common sense and common consent in communicable disease surveillanceJournal of Medical Ethics, 2003
- Education and debate: Consent, confidentiality, and the threat to public health surveillance * Commentary: Don't waive consent lightly---involve the publicBMJ, 2002
- The Data Protection Act (1998): implications for health researchersJournal of Advanced Nursing, 2001
- The importance of conducting and reporting pilot studies: the example of the Scottish Births SurveyJournal of Advanced Nursing, 2001
- Using patient-identifiable data for observational research and auditBMJ, 2000
- BMA's patient confidentiality rules are deemed unlawfulBMJ, 1999
- Informed consent in medical research: Journals should not publish research to which patients have not given fully informed consent with three exceptionsBMJ, 1997
- Qualitative Research: Introducing focus groupsBMJ, 1995
- Use of personal medical records for research purposesBMJ, 1994