e.g. mhealth
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Data Ownership in the AI-Powered Integrative Health Care Landscape
Within this intersection, questions regarding data ownership become pivotal [2]. The wealth of patient data created during the practice of IHC and processed by AI includes medical history, social determinants of health (SDOHs), lifestyle factors, and treatment responses. These underscore the importance of clarifying ownership and control over this sensitive information. Varied legal and ethical perspectives on health data ownership have emerged.
JMIR Med Inform 2024;12:e57754
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Therefore, the most current data on mobile phone or smartphone ownership patterns is necessary to improve current m Health interventions and to inform future m Health interventions that target various steps in the HIV cascade.
This research aims to describe smartphone ownership, preferences, and usage patterns among pregnant women living with HIV in South Africa in order to inform future interventions.
JMIR Form Res 2023;7:e43855
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Device ownership analyses were tested against a Bonferroni-adjusted alpha level of .008 (.05/6). All technology use analyses were tested against a Bonferroni-adjusted alpha level of .008 (.05/6).
The University of Chicago Biological Sciences Division Institutional Review Board (hospitalist survey IRB16-1131 and technology survey IRB16-0763) approved this study. Trained researchers screened and approached eligible patients from June 2019 to January 2020.
JMIR Form Res 2023;7:e40103
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Ethical Issues in Patient Data Ownership
ownershipEthical Issues in Patient Data Ownership
Interact J Med Res 2021;10(2):e22269
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The Academic Viewpoint on Patient Data Ownership in the Context of Big Data: Scoping Review
Therefore, ownership implies certain legal rights over a property along with the explicit right to possess it, such as being able to control, enjoy, use, sell, rent, give away, make profit, or even destroy an item of property. This concept is clear from the perspective of corporeal ownership. It becomes much more complicated when considering incorporeal ownership, such as intellectual property or data and information [11].
J Med Internet Res 2020;22(8):e22214
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By race/ethnicity, the proportion of smartphone ownership for White, Black, and Hispanic people was 82%, 80%, and 79%, respectively [1]. By gender, 79% of women and 84% of men owned a smartphone in 2019 [1]. Although smartphone and tablet ownership have increased over the past decade, the degree to which people use mobile devices to help them make medical decisions remains unclear.
JMIR Mhealth Uhealth 2020;8(8):e19531
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The use of m Health interventions over time has largely mirrored the rapid growth in ownership of smartphones and other devices over the last two decades [2,22,23]. In 2018, approximately 95% of Americans owned a mobile phone of some kind [23]. Between 2010 and 2016, the Pew Research Center reported that smartphone ownership among Americans increased from 35% to 77% and tablet ownership increased from 3% to 51% [24].
JMIR Mhealth Uhealth 2019;7(1):e12228
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