Research Involvement and Engagement (Jun 2021)

Perceptions of anonymised data use and awareness of the NHS data opt-out amongst patients, carers and healthcare staff

  • C. Atkin,
  • B. Crosby,
  • K. Dunn,
  • G. Price,
  • E. Marston,
  • C. Crawford,
  • M. O’Hara,
  • C. Morgan,
  • M. Levermore,
  • S. Gallier,
  • S. Modhwadia,
  • J. Attwood,
  • S. Perks,
  • A. K. Denniston,
  • G. Gkoutos,
  • R. Dormer,
  • A. Rosser,
  • A. Ignatowicz,
  • H. Fanning,
  • E. Sapey,
  • On behalf of the PIONEER Data Hub

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40900-021-00281-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

Read online

Plain English summary Health data from routine care can be pseudonymised (with a link remaining to the patient but identifying features removed) or anonymised (with identifying features removed and the link to the patient severed) and used for research and health planning; termed “secondary use”. The National Health Service (NHS) is a single publicly-funded health service for the United Kingdom (UK). The NHS supports secondary data use with a National Data opt-out system. The potential benefits of data secondary use are clear but concerns have been raised. Although the Data Opt-Out is publicised, it is unclear how much public awareness there is of this scheme. We report a patient and publicly created and delivered series of activities including > 350 people; with young adults, patients, NHS staff and the public; to assess concerns, knowledge and acceptance of data sharing. Perceptions of and support for secondary health data use varied depending on who was asked (by age, gender) and their experience of health services (Staff member, patient, member of the public). Knowledge of schemes to limit secondary data use (such as the UK National Data Op-Out) was low, even among NHS staff. The main concerns of sharing health data included onward data use, the potential for discrimination and exploitation and commercial gain from data use with no benefit to patients. Despite this, most participants agreed with health data sharing with NHS, academic and commercial health-based entities. Agreed, co-created themes to increase the acceptability of health data secondary use included education about ‘Opt-out’ schemes, health service oversight of data use (as the most trusted partner), public and patient involvement in data sharing decisions and public transparency.

Keywords