Why
is it necessary to relate in such detail a discussion in one of
the world's smallest societies and how does it concern other
societies? The answer is mainly that the IcMA soon presented its
views abroad, both to the Nordic medical associations and within
the WMA. This has lead the WMA to deal specially with the ethics
of databases, as the ethics of medical science has been one of the
association's main tasks from the beginning. Thereby the issue of
databases with health information has become the issue of all
medical associations within the WMA. A workgroup was appointed in
2000 to work on a declaration in this field to be presented at the
association's annual meeting in the autumn of 2002. It is hoped
that the declaration will be agreed on as the policy of the WMA
marking the course in that field for years to come.
The
WMA has mostly completed its work on the declaration and it will
contain certain basic principles. Most of them are to be found in
the association's earlier statements such as the Declaration of
Lisbon on the Rights of the Patient, the Declaration of Geneva
(International Code of Medical Ethics) and the Declaration of
Helsinki (Recommendations Guiding Physicians in Biomedical
Research Involving Human Subjects). The main points regarding
patients' rights are:
1.
The right to be informed. Patients should be informed if
information on them is to be made available to a third party. This
information should be provided even in instances when the patient
cannot oppose the use of his health information.
2.
A person's right to oppose the use of that information. There will
be a general rule that a patient can oppose the transfer of
information on him to an indicated database and only in
exceptional cases will he be unable to oppose.
3.
The right to consent. Only in exceptional cases would information
be transferred to a health database without seeking consent.
4.
The right to confidentiality. A patient should be able to trust
that his physician will not give to others information that the
patient gives him in order to be cured of his ills.
5.
The right to deletion of data. Should the patient change his mind
he should be able to demand that his data be deleted if
technically possible.
One
of the difficult issues to solve is that patients' rights
regarding the use of health information does not go against the
interest of all. In some instances it is not difficult to support
the interest of all, like health authorities must be able to
monitor infectious diseases that pose a risk to public health such
as tuberculosis and HIV infection. Databases on cancer have been
used for a long time in some countries without them being
questioned. Should patients have the right to oppose a transfer of
information on their cancer to such a cancer register? There is a
widespread use of databases to measure the success of a treatment
in order to increase it (quality control) and in order for them to
be useful it is important that information on every patient be
registered. In none of these instances can it be asserted that
patients providing information gain directly from the registration
and it differs how easily one can argue for the interest of all
even though it may apply in these examples. The case is different
for databases that are only used for research. There seems to be
agreement that each patient should be able to decide whether his
information be transferred to a database used for research, such
as when patients participate directly in research, as stated in
the Declaration of Helsinki. This leaves two issues to be solved.
What about existing databases with information gathered within the
health system and which are only to be used for research but where
patients were not asked their opinion? What is to be done about
all composed databases, such as those who are set up for one
purpose (e.g. quality control) but are then used for other
purposes such as research? Many of these points have not been
fully discussed but WMA and are yet to be resolved.
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