2019
DOI: 10.1111/cge.13686
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Psychological factors that determine people's willingness‐to‐share genetic data for research

Abstract: Of all the information that we share, health and genetic data might be among the most valuable for researchers. As data are handled as particularly sensitive information, a number of pressing issues regarding people's preferences and privacy concerns are raised. The goal of the present study was to contribute to an understanding of people's reported willingness‐to‐share genetic data for science (WTS). For this, predictive psychological factors (eg, risk and benefit perceptions, trust, knowledge) were investiga… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(11 citation statements)
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References 54 publications
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“…Having such autonomy over the data was perceived as a form of safeguard against data misuse. Especially young adults were particularly interested in decisional privacy [ 50 , 51 ]. The publicly funded project PROMISE developed a solution for these problems by providing a system of data transparency, security, and privacy, thereby reducing the risks carried by the patient while providing a high level of autonomy to decide on the where and when of data usage.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Having such autonomy over the data was perceived as a form of safeguard against data misuse. Especially young adults were particularly interested in decisional privacy [ 50 , 51 ]. The publicly funded project PROMISE developed a solution for these problems by providing a system of data transparency, security, and privacy, thereby reducing the risks carried by the patient while providing a high level of autonomy to decide on the where and when of data usage.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Taking the contextual perspective into account, a data recipient can never be fully separated from the purpose for which the recipient plans to use the data. While each of the data types can be analyzed to provide a benefit to the individual data subject (e.g., improvement of diagnoses, recommendations on health-related behavior) and/or recipient, the public also appears to be willing to accept the use of health data for the public interest (Bearth & Siegrist, 2020; Waind, 2020)—that is, to improve public health. In both cases, individuals may perceive the data sharing to be useful.…”
Section: Willingness To Share Health Data: Data Type Recipient and Pu...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In March 2020, we tested individuals' willingness to take a genetic test in a field survey in Switzerland sample (N = 1000). Our research builds on prior studies which emphasize that individuals cherish the protection of their personal health data [6,9,10], especially genetic data [11,13,14] because it is an infringement into physical privacy [19]. We thus tested whether different forms of storage to personal health data from genetic tests, would have different effects on citizens' willingness to take those tests.…”
Section: Survey Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Genetic data is a particularly sensitive form of health data, and individuals' willingness to even elect to take a test may be mitigated by their attitude toward genetic information and its use [11][12][13][14]. In this context, taking stock of individuals' willingness to conduct such tests is of paramount importance.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%