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Assessing Ethoshunt as a Gamification-Based Mobile App in Ethics Education: Pilot Mixed-Methods Study

Assessing Ethoshunt as a Gamification-Based Mobile App in Ethics Education: Pilot Mixed-Methods Study

One of the students mentioned that knowledge gained through the technology-based education tool was the most helpful experience, as the student could learn while enhancing the understanding of ethics. The remaining students stated that the activities conducted in the ethics class and the support from the ethics educator were the most helpful experiences in learning ethics.

Noor Syamilah Zakaria, M Iqbal Saripan, Neerushah Subarimaniam, Alyani Ismail

JMIR Serious Games 2020;8(3):e18247


The Value of Applying Ethical Principles in Telehealth Practices: Systematic Review

The Value of Applying Ethical Principles in Telehealth Practices: Systematic Review

The terms used in the keyword search were “ethics,” “ethical,” “health,” “telehealth,” “telemedicine,” and “care”. During the search process the use of the broad terms, “ethics,” “ethical,” “health,” and “care,” was combined with the restrictive terms of “telehealth” and “telemedicine”. Extended searching of internet sites, conference abstracts, and presentations was undertaken to identify any relevant grey literature that was not uncovered in the database search.

Amanda Jane Keenan, George Tsourtos, Jennifer Tieman

J Med Internet Res 2021;23(3):e25698


Bringing Code to Data: Do Not Forget Governance

Bringing Code to Data: Do Not Forget Governance

Data stewards adopting a model-to-data approach must also address issues of privacy, confidentiality, security, ownership, research ethics oversight, and sustainability. Concerns about risks to privacy are at the core of resistance to data sharing. Data sharing models involving the distribution of data to researchers rely heavily on deidentification (the process of removing direct identifiers).

Christine Suver, Adrian Thorogood, Megan Doerr, John Wilbanks, Bartha Knoppers

J Med Internet Res 2020;22(7):e18087


Person and Family Centeredness in Ethiopian Cancer Care: Proposal for a Project for Improving Communication, Ethics, Decision Making, and Health

Person and Family Centeredness in Ethiopian Cancer Care: Proposal for a Project for Improving Communication, Ethics, Decision Making, and Health

Through participating project investigators and researchers, as well as methodological and thematic connections and overlaps, the group will be associated with the International Network on Ethics of Families and the FORTE/VR research program “Addressing Ethical Obstacles to Person Centered Care” at Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden. Cancer is killing more people in the developing world than HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria combined [1-3], and it is a growing concern in Ethiopia [2,4].

Nataliya Berbyuk Lindström, Aynalem Abraha Woldemariam, Abebe Bekele, Christian Munthe, Rune Andersson, Bethlehem Girma Kebede, Barbro Linderholm, Wondemagegnhu Tigeneh

JMIR Res Protoc 2020;9(5):e16493


Connected Medical Technology and Cybersecurity Informed Consent: A New Paradigm

Connected Medical Technology and Cybersecurity Informed Consent: A New Paradigm

As medicine has shifted from a paternalistic, subordinating art to a collaborative effort of shared goal setting and decision making between parties, so too has the understanding of the ethics and acquisition of consent evolved. It is widely acknowledged that consent must be informed. This charge demands that clinicians empower patients in shared decision making through culturally competent, plain language dialogue.

Jeffrey Tully, Andrea Coravos, Megan Doerr, Christian Dameff

J Med Internet Res 2020;22(3):e17612


Understanding the Uptake of Big Data in Health Care: Protocol for a Multinational Mixed-Methods Study

Understanding the Uptake of Big Data in Health Care: Protocol for a Multinational Mixed-Methods Study

The literature in philosophy and ethics centers on theoretical discussions that only occasionally draw on rigorously analyzed empirical examples [15,23]. Importantly, studies in the field of health services research focus on legal frameworks and principles, but often neglect how such frameworks and principles become embedded in organizational practices [24,25].

Rik Wehrens, Vikrant Sihag, Sandra Sülz, Hilco van Elten, Erik van Raaij, Antoinette de Bont, Anne Marie Weggelaar-Jansen

JMIR Res Protoc 2020;9(10):e16779


Investigating the Ethical and Data Governance Issues of Artificial Intelligence in Surgery: Protocol for a Delphi Study

Investigating the Ethical and Data Governance Issues of Artificial Intelligence in Surgery: Protocol for a Delphi Study

The field of AI ethics is a response to the potential harms that AI systems can cause such as bias and discrimination, invasion of privacy, and poor-quality outcomes. AI ethics can be defined as “a set of values, principles, and techniques that employ widely accepted standards of right and wrong to guide moral conduct in the development and use of AI technologies” [7].

Kyle Lam, Fahad M Iqbal, Sanjay Purkayastha, James M Kinross

JMIR Res Protoc 2021;10(2):e26552


How Internet Contracts Impact Research: Content Analysis of Terms of Service on Consumer Product Websites

How Internet Contracts Impact Research: Content Analysis of Terms of Service on Consumer Product Websites

Currently, these issues are beyond the scope of what institutional review boards perceive as their purview, leaving researchers with few resources for guidance on questions of both ethics and legal issues [89]. We would conclude that violating TOS to conduct public health research on product websites is not ethically questionable; rather, given the public health significance of e-marketing, we may be ethically bound to conduct such research, regardless of whether it occurs on public or private websites.

Caitlin Weiger, Katherine C Smith, Joanna E Cohen, Mark Dredze, Meghan Bridgid Moran

JMIR Public Health Surveill 2020;6(4):e23579