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Health Information on the Internet: Economics, Regulation, Policy & Ethics. Yale M. Braunstein, Ph.D. Yale M. Braunstein. Professor, School of Information Management and Systems and Health Services and Policy Analysis Group , University of California, Berkeley. Lecture Outline.
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Health Information on the Internet:Economics, Regulation, Policy & Ethics Yale M. Braunstein, Ph.D.
Yale M. Braunstein Professor, School of Information Management and Systemsand Health Services and Policy Analysis Group, University of California, Berkeley
Lecture Outline • Economics & Pricing • Regulation • Ethics • Sample Policy Areas Information about health and medicine is increasingly available on the Internet. This lecture focuses on:
Economics of Information Provision Why economics matters? • The funding of the information source can influence the content • Prices, if any, influence who will have access to the information • Access to health information is related to the the provision of medical care and the overall level of health
Pricing Information (1) • How to price information? • by byte • by advertising • by subscription • hybrid schemes (such as storing and using advertising credits) • All (and more) will be used
Pricing Information (2) • Product-line development • Economies of scale • Economies of scope
Regulation • Regulation of the content of health and medical information can be viewed as ancillary to the regulation of service delivery. • Another model is to apply regulatory models from other areas—consumer product safety, privacy, etc.
Ethical and Legal Concerns May Be Different • Not everything that is legal is ethical • Not everything that is ethical is legal Ethics • is based in cultures and sub-cultures • is different from good taste • may or may not be related to intent • is related to context
Sample Policy Areas • Privacy & Security • Intellectual Property • Control of Information • Licensure & Liability
Policy: Privacy • Multiple aspects to privacy • annoyance • actuarial information • willingness to pay • damages to character • Consumers value privacy -- therefore it has an economic dimension • Consumers could trade privacy for prices • define a property right in privacy
Confidentiality, Privacy and Security (1) • Current “standards of care” may be changing as they depend on customary practices, ethics codes, and law • Practitioners need to understand practical, technical, and legal limits of the technology • Patients may need to be informed of limits to privacy and privilege
Confidentiality, Privacy and Security (2) • Doctor-patient privilege applies to communications in the course of diagnosis or treatment • Does it apply when requesting or providing advice over the Internet? • There is a duty to maintain confidentiality • Is this possible over the Internet? • When using a cellular telephone?
Confidentiality, Privacy and Security (3) • U.S. federal law specifically permits operators of online services to monitor e-mail transmissions of subscribers • Employers can monitor e-mail of employees • Some states have taken a “cat’s out of the bag” approach--confidentiality has already been compromised so there is no longer anything to protect
Confidentiality, Privacy and Security (4) • Do either patients or professionals understand they have little reasonable expectation of privacy? • In fact e-mail and other online activity make it difficult (or impossible) to: • know when disclosure has occurred • to obtain patient’s consent • Not only can communications be intercepted, mis-delivered messages are quite common. • Privacy and security are NOT the same • The classic case is the sale of personal data by GeoCities; the information sold was very secure but privacy was not respected.
Confidentiality, Privacy and Security (5) • Any electronic communication may lead to TGI (transaction generated information or access markers) that can make tracking easy • Do consumers want third parties* to know they obtained information on specific problems or treatments • vendors • insurers • employers, neighbors, etc.
Confidentiality, Privacy and Security (6) • Storage of records and notes in electronic format requires care • Especially if on a network • Especially if on a laptop • Use of passwords, encryption, and other methods such as removable media Remember the Basic Question: What is the standard of care that is expected?
Policy: Intellectual Property (1) • Some intellectual property issues may fade with new approaches to licensing & pricing • Consumers reject intrusive or cumbersome measures • Suppliers need to employ more effective pricing strategies
Policy: Intellectual Property (2) • Database protection laws create a new form of intellectual property in the EU and are being debated in the U.S. (There are ethical, legal, and economic aspects to this policy issue.) (Note: encryption policy is related to both intellectual property policy and privacy.)
Who Is an Authority? • The Internet appears to have a “leveling” effect • Anyone can set himself up as a judge of others • Many claims and criticisms may appear equally valid to untrained observers • These disputes can be especially difficult for patients and consumers who want results even if they may be problematical • Non-traditional medicine raises many difficulties (not just for the Internet)
Control of Information • The Internet may decrease the control traditional sources have over the flow of information. • “Quackwatch” is a site that seeks to expose fraud and misinformation. • The second example comes from the American Diabetes Association.
Licensure (1) • The Internet makes it easy to “practice” across traditional political or licensing boundaries • AMA reported 300% increase in “telehealth” consultations 1n 1997 • most common category (20%) was mental health • The traditional provider-patient relationship will change (Licensure and liability are inter-related)
Licensure (2) • PL 105-33 requires Medicare Part B payments for telehealth professional consultations by 1 Jan. 1999 • But it is sometimes difficult to distinguish between formal consultations and informal advice, especially when contact is remote • The examples that follow start with mental health and pharmaceuticals; we then look at an example that includes internal medicine specialties
Liability (1) General rules (which may be contentious) Providers should be licensed everywhere they provide service A harmed patient should have the right to sue where he is harmed
Liability (2) • Does professional competence include “technical competence” if new technologies are utilized to a substantial degree? • Who, if anyone, should be responsible for content in online forums and “chat rooms”? • Computer Decency Act (Sec. 509) provisions required online services to take “reasonable measures” or be liable for defamation • Should this apply to practitioners?
Summary • The Internet is a mature technology in an immature economy • Fundamental legal, economic, organizational issues are still to be solved • Critical choices should not be made prematurely • The Internet is already affecting the delivery of health and medical information and of services.