Patient Confidentiality and the Social Network

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Transcript of Patient Confidentiality and the Social Network

PATIENT CONFIDENTIALITY

& THE SOCIAL NETWORK

Iris Thiele Isip Tan MD, MSc Professor, UP College of Medicine Chief, UP Medical Informatics Unit @endocrine_witch

CONFIDENTIALITY IN THE AGE OF

SOCIAL MEDIA DOCTORS PROTECT

CONFIDENTIALITYWHEN PATIENTS

GIVE UP PRIVACY

PRIVACY

CONFIDENTIALITY

About people

About identifiable dataExtension of privacy

Right to be left aloneLimit access to public

Prevent unauthorized access

PRIVACY PARADOXBushel et al. Protecting human health & security in digital Europe:

How to deal with the “Privacy Paradox”? Sci Eng Ethics 2014

Fear threats to personal

autonomy and freedoms from globalized data processing by government

Voluntarily disclose

personal data on social networking

sites (names, photos, dates of birth, marital status, medical data)

Although patients and providers benefit from SoMe, the boundaries between

physicians and their patients can become blurred, putting both parties at risk.

Roupret et al. European Association of Urology (@uroweb)recommendations on the appropriate use of social media. European Urology 2014;66:628-32

EXTENDING PATIENT-MD RELATIONSHIP ONLINE?

Purpose Content Response time

Farnan et al. Online medical professionalism: patient and public relationships: Policy statement from the American College of Physicians and the Federation of State Medical Boards Ann Intern Med 2013;158:620-7

Bosslet et al. The patient-doctor relationship and online social networks: results of a national survey. J Gen Intern Med 2011;26(10):1168-74

National survey of US medical students, resident & practicing physicians

n=455

NOT ethically acceptable to interact with patients for either social (68.3%) or patient care (68%) on online social networks

79% expressed concerns about maintaining

patient confidentiality

CONFIDENTIALITY IN THE AGE OF

SOCIAL MEDIA DOCTORS PROTECT

CONFIDENTIALITYWHEN PATIENTS

GIVE UP PRIVACY

CONFIDENTIALITY IS THE PILLAR OF OUR PROFESSION.

The patient-physician relationship is built on trust that enables patients to share intimate details.

Grotty B & Mostaghimi A. Confidentiality in the Digital Age. BMJ 2014;348:g2943

AVOID USING SOCIAL MEDIA FOR DIRECT PATIENT CARE & CONTACT

Unencrypted Inadvertently accessible to others

Controlled by a third party Grotty B & Mostaghimi A. Confidentiality in the Digital Age. BMJ 2014;348:g2943

SOCIAL MEDIA IS LIKE A CROWDED ELEVATOR. Others can easily overhear conversations without the benefit of context.

Grotty B & Mostaghimi A. Confidentiality in the Digital Age. BMJ 2014;348:g2943

SOCIAL MEDIA TO FACILITATE CONVERSATION AROUND MATTERS OF PUBLIC HEALTH

OR AVAILABILITY OF SERVICES rather than matters related to a specific patient

Grotty B & Mostaghimi A. Confidentiality in the Digital Age. BMJ 2014;348:g2943

www.facebook.com/EndocrineWitch

GIVE NOTICE TO PATIENTS THAT SOCIAL MEDIA IS NOT MEANT FOR CLINICAL COMMUNICATION

Monitor. Take conversation offline if sensitive information is posted.Grotty B & Mostaghimi A. Confidentiality in the Digital Age. BMJ 2014;348:g2943

— Karen Michelle Devon, MD

I WAS SURPRISED TO FIND AN IMAGE OF MYSELF, WEARING SCRUBS, AND

HOLDING A THYROID GLAND.

Devon KM. JAMA 2013;309(18):1901-1902

Palacios-Gonzalez C. The ethics of clinical photography & social media. Med Health Care & Philos DOI 10.1007/s11019-014-9580-y

USE OF CLINICAL PHOTOGRAPHY

PRIMARY For patient care

SECONDARY For research and medical education

Clinical photography + social media DOES NOT equal telemedicine.

Palacios-Gonzalez C. The ethics of clinical photography & social media. Med Health Care & Philos DOI 10.1007/s11019-014-9580-y

Patients do not have adequate information to give informed consent.

PRIMARY

Even if patients recant consent, nearly impossible to retrieve or delete clinical images.

Palacios-Gonzalez C. The ethics of clinical photography & social media. Med Health Care & Philos DOI 10.1007/s11019-014-9580-y

Moderate comments to avoid derogatory remarks about clinical images or patients depicted.

SECONDARY

www.healthxph.net/manifesto

I will value the patient’s dignity & privacy by not taking selfies, groufies or videos during encounters with patients that include patients’ body parts, surgical specimens or that show patients in the background without their consent.

#HEALTHXPH

www.healthxph.net/manifesto

I will refrain from posting information online that will compromise patient confidentiality and privacy.

#HEALTHXPH

PATIENT IDENTIFIERSNames Geographic information Dates (eg. birth date, admission date, discharge date, date of death) Telephone numbers Fax numbers Email addresses Social security numbers Medical record numbers Health plan beneficiary numbers Account numbers Certificate/license numbers Vehicle identifiers & serial numbers, including license plate numbers Device identifiers and serial numbers URLs

IP address numbers Biometric identifiers (eg. finger and voice prints) Full-face photographic images & any comparable images Other unique identifying numbers, characteristics or codes

Protected health information

any medical information about a specific patient in combination with any

information that could be used to identify that patient

CONFIDENTIALITY IN THE AGE OF

SOCIAL MEDIA DOCTORS PROTECT

CONFIDENTIALITYWHEN PATIENTS

GIVE UP PRIVACY

PUBLIC HAS FEWER WORRIES ABOUT SHARING HEALTH INFORMATION THAN OTHER PERSONAL DATA

Andrew Cole. BMJ 2013;347:f4753

The Wellcome Trust. Summary report of qualitative research into public attitudes to personal data and linking personal data. Jul 2013. www.wellcome.ac.uk/stellent/groups/ corporatesite/@msh_grants/documents/web_document/wtp053205.pdf.

HEALTH INFORMATION SHOULD NOT BE SHARED TO EMPLOYERS, INSURANCE PROVIDERS & DRUG MANUFACTURERS.

Andrew Cole. BMJ 2013;347:f4753The Wellcome Trust. Summary report of qualitative research into public attitudes to personal data and linking personal data.

Jul 2013. www.wellcome.ac.uk/stellent/groups/ corporatesite/@msh_grants/documents/web_document/wtp053205.pdf.

Andrew Cole. BMJ 2013;347:f4753The Wellcome Trust. Summary report of qualitative research into public attitudes to personal data and linking personal data.

Jul 2013. www.wellcome.ac.uk/stellent/groups/ corporatesite/@msh_grants/documents/web_document/wtp053205.pdf.

DATA LINKAGE, WHERE INFORMATION FROM ONE SOURCE IS USED TO INFORM WORK IN ANOTHER AREAEx. Supermarket loyalty card to gauge public health program

J Am Acad Dermatol 2013;68:1030-3

Sarah liked Dr. W’s Facebook page. She commented on a discount coupon for tattoo removal. Sarah’s mother fears that “everyone will know” about Sarah’s tattoo. The mother demands that the clinic inactivate the Facebook page immediately.

DR. W SHOULD …

A. Make no changes to the Facebook site. B. Institute a system for monitoring the site on a regular basis to purge inappropriate posts. C. Disable the site’s comment section to eliminate the possibility of patient’s disclosing personal information. D. Discontinue the requirement that patients “Like” the Facebook page to receive discount coupons. E. Discontinue the Facebook site.

Orenstein et al. E-professionalism at the dermatology office: New challenges to confidentiality in the era of social networking. J Am Acad Dermatol 2013;68:1030-3

DR. W SHOULD …A. Make no changes to the Facebook site.

Sarah has the right to post protected health information (PHI).

Exercise vigilance when establishing a web forum with foreseeable risk of unintentional disclosure of PHI.

Orenstein et al. E-professionalism at the dermatology office: New challenges to confidentiality in the era of social networking. J Am Acad Dermatol 2013;68:1030-3

DR. W SHOULD …B. Institute a system for monitoring the site on a regular basis to purge inappropriate posts.

Approach is labor-intensive and imperfect

Instantaneous dissemination of information on social networks

Impossible to remove information from cached Web pages

Orenstein et al. E-professionalism at the dermatology office: New challenges to confidentiality in the era of social networking. J Am Acad Dermatol 2013;68:1030-3

DR. W SHOULD …C. Disable the site’s comment section to eliminate the possibility of patient’s disclosing personal information.

Limits potential for patient education

Orenstein et al. E-professionalism at the dermatology office: New challenges to confidentiality in the era of social networking. J Am Acad Dermatol 2013;68:1030-3

DR. W SHOULD …D. Discontinue the requirement that patients “Like” the Facebook page to receive discount coupons.

Prevent the MD’s direct complicity in exposing the patient’s treatment for a potentially stigmatizing condition

Upholds social justice

Orenstein et al. E-professionalism at the dermatology office: New challenges to confidentiality in the era of social networking. J Am Acad Dermatol 2013;68:1030-3

DR. W SHOULD …

A. Make no changes to the Facebook site. B. Institute a system for monitoring the site on a regular basis to purge inappropriate posts. C. Disable the site’s comment section to eliminate the possibility of patient’s disclosing personal information. D. Discontinue the requirement that patients “Like” the Facebook page to receive discount coupons. E. Discontinue the Facebook site.

J Am Acad Dermatol 2013;68:1030-3

Social media is a window through which we ask people to look. How big we make the window is up to us, as is what we do in front of the window.

Journal of the American Pharmacists Association Nov/Dec 2013doi: 10.1331/JAPhA.2013.13536