Crowdsourcing smartphone data for biomedical research: Ethical and legal questions

Author:

Lang Michael1,McKibbin Kyle2,Shabani Mahsa2,Borry Pascal3,Gautrais Vincent4,Verbeke Kamiel3,Zawati Ma’n H1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Centre of Genomics and Policy, McGill University, Montreal, Canada

2. Faculty of Law and Criminology, Ghent University, Institute for International Research on Criminal Policy, Ghent, Belgium

3. KU Leuven, Centre for Biomedical Ethics and Law, Leuven, Belgium

4. Université de Montréal, Faculté de droit, Chaire L.R. Wilson sur le droit des technologies de l’information et du commerce électronique, Montreal, Canada

Abstract

The use of smartphones has greatly increased in the last decade and has revolutionized the way that health data are being collected and shared. Mobile applications leverage the ubiquity and technological sophistication of modern smartphones to record and process a variety of metrics relevant to human health, including behavioral measures, clinical data, and disease symptoms. Information processed by mobile applications may have significant utility for increasing biomedical knowledge, both through conventional research and emerging discovery paradigms such as citizen science. However, the ways in which smartphone-collected data may be used in nontraditional modes of biomedical discovery are not well understood, such as using data to train artificially intelligent algorithms and for product development purposes. This paper argues that the use of mobile health data for algorithm training and product development is (a) likely to become a prominent fixture in medicine, (b) likely to raise significant ethical and legal challenges, and (c) warrants immediate scrutiny by policymakers and scholars. We introduce the concept of “smartphone-crowdsourced medical data,” or SCMD, and set out a broad research agenda for addressing concerns associated with this new and potentially momentous practice. We conclude that SCMD for algorithm training raises a number of ethical and legal issues which require further scholarly attention to ensure that individual interests are protected and that emerging health information sources can be used in ways that maximally, and safely, promote medical innovation.

Funder

Fonds de Recherche du Québec - Santé

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Health Information Management,Computer Science Applications,Health Informatics,Health Policy

Reference26 articles.

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3. Silver L. Smartphone Ownership Is Growing Rapidly Around the World, but Not Always Equally. Pew Research Center 2019; online: https://www.pewresearch.org/global/2019/02/05/smartphone-ownership-is-growing-rapidly-around-the-world-but-not-always-equally/.

4. The Federal Trade Commission and Consumer Protections for Mobile Health Apps

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