In safe hands: child health data storage, linkage and consent for use.

Health Promot Int

Department of Paediatrics: Child and Youth Health, School of Medicine, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.

Published: December 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores the perspectives of children, young people, and their parents in Aotearoa New Zealand on issues related to child health data, highlighting limited inclusivity of their views in this important discourse.
  • Participants from diverse backgrounds discussed three main themes: seeing patients as individuals beyond just numbers, the notion of data as a powerful tool, and the importance of understanding intentions behind data use while emphasizing consent as an ongoing relationship.
  • The research raises concerns about the potential negative impact of data integration on marginalized groups and stresses the need for ethical, child rights-based approaches to ensure trust and equity in health data management.

Article Abstract

While there is potential for societal benefit from linkage and integration of large datasets, there are gaps in our understanding of the implications for children and young people, and limited inclusion of their views within this discourse. We aimed to understand the views and expectations of children, young people and their parents/caregivers in Aotearoa New Zealand regarding child health data storage, linkage and consent for use. This qualitative study included 24 Māori and non-Māori children, young people and their families across five focus groups, recruited from a community-based health service. A mixed Māori and non-Māori research team facilitated participant recruitment and data collection. Child, adolescent and parent/caregiver groups were held separately. Sessions were audio-recorded and the verbatim transcripts were analysed thematically. We identified three themes: (i) I am more than a number: seeing patients as people; (ii) In safe hands: data as power; and (iii) What are your intentions with my data? Consent as an active relationship. A key challenge was the reductive and stigmatizing potential of data integration for minoritised groups. Hypothetical discussions of data sharing and linkage were contingent on trust between the participant and the health professional, with negotiated data ownership. Consent was conceived as an active relationship needing renewal and renegotiation as children reached adulthood. Current consent processes for ongoing use of child data require further deliberation. Without a strong ethical and child rights-based approach to issues of child health data management, consent and linkage, we risk exacerbating health inequities and experiences of breach of trust.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10699835PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/heapro/daad159DOI Listing

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