2018
DOI: 10.2196/11254
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Elements of Trust in Digital Health Systems: Scoping Review

Abstract: BackgroundInformation and communication technologies have long become prominent components of health systems. Rapid advances in digital technologies and data science over the last few years are predicted to have a vast impact on health care services, configuring a paradigm shift into what is now commonly referred to as digital health. Forecasted to curb rising health costs as well as to improve health system efficiency and safety, digital health success heavily relies on trust from professional end users, admi… Show more

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Cited by 115 publications
(113 citation statements)
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References 48 publications
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“…Individuals may start to collect data for themselves but agree to share it for research afterwards. For instance, Achievement [2] is a commercial mobile app for personal health Acceptance and Trust People trust some institutions more than others [34,39,118,132] Trust can be hindered by previous experiences [3,5,34] Acceptance decreases if data collection is hard [32,71] Acceptance decreases if the purpose is not useful [75,78,137,152] Willingness to share People worry about data misuse [78,95,96] People want to preserve their reputation [65,77,111,119,121] Some types of data are more sensitive [14,47,61,86,123,146] Some people are more concerned than others [8,63,86] Consent and Ethics Consent forms are lengthy and complex [84,110] People cannot understand the risks [31,94,115,131] Lack of flexible sharing options and control [5,27,57,64,73,91,106] Lack of transparenc...…”
Section: National Initiativesmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Individuals may start to collect data for themselves but agree to share it for research afterwards. For instance, Achievement [2] is a commercial mobile app for personal health Acceptance and Trust People trust some institutions more than others [34,39,118,132] Trust can be hindered by previous experiences [3,5,34] Acceptance decreases if data collection is hard [32,71] Acceptance decreases if the purpose is not useful [75,78,137,152] Willingness to share People worry about data misuse [78,95,96] People want to preserve their reputation [65,77,111,119,121] Some types of data are more sensitive [14,47,61,86,123,146] Some people are more concerned than others [8,63,86] Consent and Ethics Consent forms are lengthy and complex [84,110] People cannot understand the risks [31,94,115,131] Lack of flexible sharing options and control [5,27,57,64,73,91,106] Lack of transparenc...…”
Section: National Initiativesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the development of trust is a continuous process, and trust can change over time [34]. Some enablers of trust in digital systems have been listed as fair data access, recommendation by others, customised design features, initial face-to-face contact, stakeholder engagement and improved communication [3].…”
Section: Privacymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lessons from a previous review, conducted by some of the authors of this article, were useful in structuring the review process. 31 Procedure. To derive search terms related to trust and trustworthiness, we developed and conducted test runs of relevant keywords, synonyms, medical subject heading (MeSH) terms in several electronic databases.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…By now, there is no harmonized definition for terms like “digital health” or “mobile (m) Health” [8,9,10], thus leading to multiple operational definitions [9]. For instance, a systematic review on published definitions of electronic (e) Health showed that there are 51 unique definitions of eHealth [11].…”
Section: Digital and Mobile (M) Health—definitionmentioning
confidence: 99%