2012
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2012.01.005
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Perspectives of Australian adults about protecting the privacy of their health information in statistical databases

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Cited by 89 publications
(140 citation statements)
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“…When sharing health information for medical research, it is necessary to apply extra security measures with which to protect privacy in order to decrease levels of privacy concern [25]. Several socio-technical-material factors may influence hospital-based information systems security [23,[26][27][28]: pervasive computer use, endemic aural privacy shortcomings, shared clinical devices, limited budgets, outdated infrastructure, interruptions in clinical context and complex regulations resulting in poor security training.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When sharing health information for medical research, it is necessary to apply extra security measures with which to protect privacy in order to decrease levels of privacy concern [25]. Several socio-technical-material factors may influence hospital-based information systems security [23,[26][27][28]: pervasive computer use, endemic aural privacy shortcomings, shared clinical devices, limited budgets, outdated infrastructure, interruptions in clinical context and complex regulations resulting in poor security training.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The results of bright spot on Public Interest use of PHI are parallel to the research internationally (Andersen & Storm 2013;T. King et al 2012;Susilo & Win 2007).…”
Section: Interpretation and Discussionmentioning
confidence: 60%
“…Al-senaidy et al [12] state that almost three-quarters (74%) of Saudi Arabian respondents were not worried about their information privacy and generally did not change their default privacy settings on social network websites. Conversely, 68.8 per cent of United Kingdom respondents and 66 per cent of Australian respondents were quite worried about their information privacy [13,14]. These statistics indicate a significant problem with Saudi Arabian people that could expose them to risk, unless their respective governments solve this issue by developing and adhering to security and privacy policies.…”
Section: People's Perspectivesmentioning
confidence: 99%