Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/87533
Title: Big data in healthcare and the life sciences
Other Titles: Ethics and integrity in health and life sciences research
Authors: Mifsud, Janet
Gavrilovici, Cristina
Keywords: Big data
Medical care -- Data processing
Medicine -- Research -- Moral and ethical aspects
Life sciences -- Data processing
Issue Date: 2019
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Citation: Mifsud, J., & Gavrilovici, C. (2019). Big data in healthcare and the life sciences. In: Z. Koporc (ed.), Ethics and integrity in health and life sciences research, vo. 4 (pp. 63-83). London: Emerald Publishing.
Abstract: Big Data analysis is one of the key challenges to the provision of health care to emerge in the last few years. This challenge has been spearheaded by the huge interest in the “4Ps” of health care (predictive, preventive, personalized, and participatory). Big Data offers striking development opportunities in health care and life sciences. Healthcare research is already using Big Data to analyze the spatial distribution of diseases such as diabetes mellitus at detailed geographic levels. Big Data is also being used to assess location-specific risk factors based on data of health insurance claims. Other studies in systems medicine utilize bioinformatics approaches to human biology which necessitate Big Data statistical analysis and medical informatics tools. Big Data is also being used to develop electronic algorithms to forecast clinical events in real time, with the intent to improve patient outcomes and thus reduce costs. Yet, this Big Data era also poses critically difficult ethical challenges, since it is breaking down the traditional divisions between what belongs to public and private domains in health care and health research. Big Data in health care raises complex ethical concerns due to use of huge datasets obtained from different sources for varying reasons. The clinical translation of this Big Data is thus resulting in key ethical and epistemological challenges for those who use these data to generate new knowledge and the clinicians who eventually apply it to improve patient care. Underlying this challenge is the fact that patient consent often cannot be collected for the use of individuals’ personal data which then forms part of this Big Data. There is also the added dichotomy of healthcare providers which use such Big Data in attempts to reduce healthcare costs, and the negative impact this may have on the individual with respect to privacy issues and potential discrimination. Big Data thus challenges societal norms of privacy and consent. Many questions are being raised on how these huge masses of data can be managed into valuable information and meaningful knowledge, while still maintaining ethical norms. Maintaining ethical integrity may lack behind in such a fast-changing sphere of knowledge. There is also an urgent need for international cooperation and standards when considering the ethical implications of the use of Big Data-intensive information. This chapter will consider some of the main ethical aspects of this fast-developing field in the provision of health care, health research, and public health. It will use examples to concretize the discussion, such as the ethical aspects of the applications of Big Data obtained from clinical trials, and the use of Big Data obtained from the increasing popularity of health mobile apps and social media sites.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/87533
Appears in Collections:Scholarly Works - FacM&SCPT

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