Keywords
epidemiologyethics
data sharing
Public aspects of medicine
RA1-1270
Medicine
R
DOAJ:Public Health
DOAJ:Health Sciences
Industrial medicine. Industrial hygiene
RC963-969
Full record
Show full item recordAbstract
<p>Abstract</p> <p>In recent years there has been a major change on the part of funders, particularly in North America, so that data sharing is now considered to be the norm rather than the exception. We believe that data sharing is a good idea. However, we also believe that it is inappropriate to prescribe exactly when or how researchers should preserve and share data, since these issues are highly specific to each study, the nature of the data collected, who is requesting it, and what they intend to do with it. The level of ethical concern will vary according to the nature of the information, and the way in which it is collected - analyses of anonymised hospital admission records may carry a quite different ethical burden than analyses of potentially identifiable health information collected directly from the study participants. It is striking that most discussions about data sharing focus almost exclusively on issues of ownership (by the researchers or the funders) and efficiency (on the part of the funders). There is usually little discussion of the ethical issues involved in data sharing, and its implications for the study participants. Obtaining prior informed consent from the participants does not solve this problem, unless the informed consent process makes it completely clear what is being proposed, in which case most study participants would not agree. Thus, the undoubted benefits of data sharing does not remove the obligations and responsibilities that the original investigators hold for the people they invited to participate in the study.</p>Date
2011-12-01Type
ArticleIdentifier
oai:doaj.org/article:ab5171f8e6464a1984546eddce3ddc3210.1186/1476-069X-10-107
1476-069X
https://doaj.org/article/ab5171f8e6464a1984546eddce3ddc32