Ethical Considerations When Using a Mobile Eye Tracker in a Patient-Facing Area: Lessons from an Intensive Care Unit Observational Protocol

Ethan P Larsen, Jacob M Kolman, Faisal N Masud, Farzan Sasangohar

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

5 Scopus citations

Abstract

This article describes the process of designing, approving, and conducting an investigator-initiated protocol to use an eye-tracking device in a health care setting. Participants wore the device, which resembles eyeglasses, in a front-facing manner in an intensive care unit for the study of personnel gaze patterns, producing a visual record of workflow. While the data of interest for our study was not specifically the health information protected by the privacy rule of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), a wide variety of such data was captured by the eye-tracking device, and the prospective consent of all people who might have been incidentally videotaped was not feasible. The protocol therefore required attention to unique ethical considerations-including consent, privacy and confidentiality, HIPAA compliance, institutional liability, and the use of secondary data. The richness of eye-tracker data suggests various beneficial applications in health care occupational research and quality improvement. Therefore, sharing our study's successful design and execution, including proactive researcher-institutional review board communication, can inform and encourage similarly valuable, ethical, and innovative audiovisual research techniques.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)2-13
Number of pages12
JournalEthics & human research
Volume42
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2020

Keywords

  • HIPAA Privacy Rule
  • audiovisual research
  • health personnel
  • human subjects research
  • intensive care units
  • mobile eye tracker
  • patient rights

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Health(social science)
  • Medicine(all)

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