UTAR Institutional Repository

A study on patient data sharing acceptability among Malaysian with data mining techniques

Lee, Xin Ying (2023) A study on patient data sharing acceptability among Malaysian with data mining techniques. Final Year Project, UTAR.

[img]
Preview
PDF
Download (1761Kb) | Preview

    Abstract

    The Coronavirus Disease (Covid-19) is a major stress test for the healthcare sector. Malaysia is one of the countries that quickly adopted telehealth in a large-scale. Sharing personal information and health records with healthcare providers are required in telehealth. During interactive video conference, patient data transmission happens at all sites. Growing interest and adoption in telemedicine bring cybersecurity pressure to the healthcare industry. Legal and ethical aspects are imperative in telemedicine. In Malaysia, Telemedicine Act 1997 has been promogulated and passed but is yet to be enforced. Patients must acknowledge the risks of private health information being exposed. Patient acceptability is essential to propel telehealth quality and adoption. This study aims to explore patient data sharing acceptability among Malaysian using data mining techniques. This study may lay a foundation for all authorities, highlighting current ambiguity and implementing effective interventions. Ultimately, state-of-the-art healthcare services could be accessed and delivered. Actual execution of questionnaire distribution yielded 162 respondents. Data analysis and data mining were conducted on survey results with SPSS and Python for closed-ended questions and open-ended questions respectively. Latent Dirichlet Allocation (LDA) topic modeling alongside term frequencyinverse document frequency (TF-IDF) score are used for analyzing unstructured texts collected from open-ended questions which allows true insights collection. More than 61% of respondents responded willing to disclose information on family contacts, phone numbers, email addresses, and geolocation. Additionally, more than 58% of respondents were willing to provide their medical prescription, medical history, and diagnostic results. Age, work or study field, income and marital status were found to be associated with data sharing attitude. Malaysians expressed privacy breach concerns and worried about the digital literacy of the elderly. Information and Technology (IT) industry received the lowest level of trust. Data privacy, transparent communication and education were suggested ways to enhance data sharing willingness.

    Item Type: Final Year Project / Dissertation / Thesis (Final Year Project)
    Subjects: R Medicine > R Medicine (General)
    Divisions: Lee Kong Chian Faculty of Engineering and Science > Bachelor of Engineering (Honours) Biomedical Engineering
    Depositing User: Sg Long Library
    Date Deposited: 08 Aug 2023 20:14
    Last Modified: 08 Aug 2023 20:14
    URI: http://eprints.utar.edu.my/id/eprint/5810

    Actions (login required)

    View Item