scholarly journals Compliance Assessment for Chronic Disease Management Applications in China: Scale Development and Privacy Policy Evaluation (Preprint)

10.2196/23409 ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhenni Ni ◽  
Yiying Wang ◽  
Yuxing Qian
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhenni Ni ◽  
Yiying Wang ◽  
Yuxing Qian

BACKGROUND With the development of mobile health, chronic disease management applications have brought the possibility of reducing the burden of chronic diseases and also brought huge privacy risks to patients' health data. OBJECTIVE The purpose of the study is to analyze the extent to which chronic disease management apps comply with personal information security regulations. METHODS This article analyzed the privacy policies of 39 popular chronic disease management apps, introduced a scale based on personal information security specifications, and analyzed the compliance of privacy policies from various stages of the information life cycle. RESULTS 26 apps (66.7%) have a privacy policy and the average score of these apps is 39 points. CONCLUSIONS It was found that most chronic disease management apps in China have a privacy policy, but the content expression was ambiguous and unclear, and it did not meet the requirements of regulations. Besides, the security issues at the information destruction stage were ignored by most app vendors.


Author(s):  
Sanghyuk Yoon ◽  
Hyosang Yoon ◽  
Seokgyu Ko ◽  
Chani Park ◽  
Md Abu Zahed ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Chuan De Foo ◽  
Shilpa Surendran ◽  
Geronimo Jimenez ◽  
John Pastor Ansah ◽  
David Bruce Matchar ◽  
...  

The primary care network (PCN) was implemented as a healthcare delivery model which organises private general practitioners (GPs) into groups and furnished with a certain level of resources for chronic disease management. A secondary qualitative analysis was conducted with data from an earlier study exploring facilitators and barriers GPs enrolled in PCN’s face in chronic disease management. The objective of this study is to map features of PCN to Starfield’s “4Cs” framework. The “4Cs” of primary care—comprehensiveness, first contact access, coordination and continuity—offer high-quality design options for chronic disease management. Interview transcripts of GPs (n = 30) from the original study were purposefully selected. Provision of ancillary services, manpower, a chronic disease registry and extended operating hours of GP practices demonstrated PCN’s empowering features that fulfil the “4Cs”. On the contrary, operational challenges such as the lack of an integrated electronic medical record and disproportionate GP payment structures limit PCNs from maximising the “4Cs”. However, the enabling features mentioned above outweighs the shortfalls in all important aspects of delivering optimal chronic disease care. Therefore, even though PCN is in its early stage of development, it has shown to be well poised to steer GPs towards enhanced chronic disease management.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document