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Privacy Concerns About Personal Health Information and Fear of Unintended Use of Biospecimens Impact Donations by African American Patients

  • Arthi Reddy
  • , Abhimanyu Amarnani
  • , Michael Chen
  • , Sophia Dynes
  • , Bryan Flores
  • , Ariella Moshchinsky
  • , Yeon Joo Lee
  • , Vadim Kurbatov
  • , Iuliana Shapira
  • , Shivakumar Vignesh
  • , Laura Martello
  • State University of New York (SUNY)
  • Yale University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

10 Scopus citations

Abstract

Biospecimen donation is essential for studies of cancer prevention, early detection, and treatment. Donations from minority groups, for whom the cancer burden is high, are infrequent and inadequate for research purposes. The obstacles to donation of biospecimens by African Americans and other minority groups must be identified. Patients aged 18–85 years were surveyed based on the clinic visited (group A: GI/primary care and group B: oncology with confirmed cancer diagnosis) and analyzed as separate groups. The validated biobanking attitudes and knowledge survey (BANKS) as well as pancreatic cancer questions were used. In group A, 278/292 surveys were completed (5/6 patients participated). In group B, 54/59 surveys were completed (4/5 patients participated). There were low mean scores on the BANKS knowledge sections, specifically in regard to specimen ownership and the separation of research and medical records. Also, two major concerns limited donation: (1) fear that personal, medical, and family medical information may be stolen from the biobank; and (2) mistrust that biospecimens could be used for unintended purposes. Low knowledge about biospecimen acquisition, added to mistrust, warrant community-based, and patient education in an effort to improve attitudes, increase participation, and regain healthy therapeutic alliances.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)522-529
Number of pages8
JournalJournal of Cancer Education
Volume35
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 1 2020

Keywords

  • Biobanking
  • Biospecimen
  • Healthcare disparity

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