Patient and Public Willingness to Share Personal Health Data for Third-Party or Secondary Uses: Systematic Review.
Rebecca L BainesSebastian StevensDaniela AustinKrithika AnilHannah Louise BradwellLeonie CooperInocencio Daniel Cortes MarambaArunangsu ChatterjeeSimon LeighPublished in: Journal of medical Internet research (2024)
There is general, yet conditional public support for sharing personal health data for third-party or secondary use. Clarity, transparency, and individual control over who has access to what data, when, and for how long are widely regarded as essential prerequisites for public data sharing support. Individual levels of control and choice need to operate within the auspices of assured data privacy and security processes, underpinned by dynamic and responsive models of consent that prioritize individual or collective benefits over and above commercial gain. Failure to understand, design, and refine data sharing approaches in response to changeable patient preferences will only jeopardize the tangible benefits of data sharing practices being fully realized.