Safe clinical photography: best practice guidelines for risk management and mitigation

Clinical photography is an essential component of patient care in plastic surgery. The use of unsecured smartphone cameras, digital cameras, social media, instant messaging, and commercially available cloud-based storage devices threatens patients’ data safety. This paper Identifies potential risks...

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Main Authors: Rajiv Chandawarkar, Prakash Nadkarni
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Korean Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons 2021-05-01
Series:Archives of Plastic Surgery
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.e-aps.org/upload/pdf/aps-2021-00262.pdf
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spelling doaj-55681e9bb86540b484b7f914c6c0c3802021-05-23T23:31:45ZengKorean Society of Plastic and Reconstructive SurgeonsArchives of Plastic Surgery2234-61632234-61712021-05-0148329530410.5999/aps.2021.002623859Safe clinical photography: best practice guidelines for risk management and mitigationRajiv Chandawarkar0Prakash Nadkarni1 Department of Plastic Surgery, Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, Columbus, OH, USA College of Nursing, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, USAClinical photography is an essential component of patient care in plastic surgery. The use of unsecured smartphone cameras, digital cameras, social media, instant messaging, and commercially available cloud-based storage devices threatens patients’ data safety. This paper Identifies potential risks of clinical photography and heightens awareness of safe clinical photography. Specifically, we evaluated existing risk-mitigation strategies globally, comparing them to industry standards in similar settings, and formulated a framework for developing a risk-mitigation plan for avoiding data breaches by identifying the safest methods of picture taking, transfer to storage, retrieval, and use, both within and outside the organization. Since threats evolve constantly, the framework must evolve too. Based on a literature search of both PubMed and the web (via Google) with key phrases and child terms (for PubMed), the risks and consequences of data breaches in individual processes in clinical photography are identified. Current clinical-photography practices are described. Lastly, we evaluate current risk mitigation strategies for clinical photography by examining guidelines from professional organizations, governmental agencies, and non-healthcare industries. Combining lessons learned from the steps above into a comprehensive framework that could contribute to national/international guidelines on safe clinical photography, we provide recommendations for best practice guidelines. It is imperative that best practice guidelines for the simple, safe, and secure capture, transfer, storage, and retrieval of clinical photographs be co-developed through cooperative efforts between providers, hospital administrators, clinical informaticians, IT governance structures, and national professional organizations. This would significantly safeguard patient data security and provide the privacy that patients deserve and expect.http://www.e-aps.org/upload/pdf/aps-2021-00262.pdfdata encryptionelectronic health recordspatient safetypatient protectionphotography
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rajiv Chandawarkar
Prakash Nadkarni
spellingShingle Rajiv Chandawarkar
Prakash Nadkarni
Safe clinical photography: best practice guidelines for risk management and mitigation
Archives of Plastic Surgery
data encryption
electronic health records
patient safety
patient protection
photography
author_facet Rajiv Chandawarkar
Prakash Nadkarni
author_sort Rajiv Chandawarkar
title Safe clinical photography: best practice guidelines for risk management and mitigation
title_short Safe clinical photography: best practice guidelines for risk management and mitigation
title_full Safe clinical photography: best practice guidelines for risk management and mitigation
title_fullStr Safe clinical photography: best practice guidelines for risk management and mitigation
title_full_unstemmed Safe clinical photography: best practice guidelines for risk management and mitigation
title_sort safe clinical photography: best practice guidelines for risk management and mitigation
publisher Korean Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons
series Archives of Plastic Surgery
issn 2234-6163
2234-6171
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Clinical photography is an essential component of patient care in plastic surgery. The use of unsecured smartphone cameras, digital cameras, social media, instant messaging, and commercially available cloud-based storage devices threatens patients’ data safety. This paper Identifies potential risks of clinical photography and heightens awareness of safe clinical photography. Specifically, we evaluated existing risk-mitigation strategies globally, comparing them to industry standards in similar settings, and formulated a framework for developing a risk-mitigation plan for avoiding data breaches by identifying the safest methods of picture taking, transfer to storage, retrieval, and use, both within and outside the organization. Since threats evolve constantly, the framework must evolve too. Based on a literature search of both PubMed and the web (via Google) with key phrases and child terms (for PubMed), the risks and consequences of data breaches in individual processes in clinical photography are identified. Current clinical-photography practices are described. Lastly, we evaluate current risk mitigation strategies for clinical photography by examining guidelines from professional organizations, governmental agencies, and non-healthcare industries. Combining lessons learned from the steps above into a comprehensive framework that could contribute to national/international guidelines on safe clinical photography, we provide recommendations for best practice guidelines. It is imperative that best practice guidelines for the simple, safe, and secure capture, transfer, storage, and retrieval of clinical photographs be co-developed through cooperative efforts between providers, hospital administrators, clinical informaticians, IT governance structures, and national professional organizations. This would significantly safeguard patient data security and provide the privacy that patients deserve and expect.
topic data encryption
electronic health records
patient safety
patient protection
photography
url http://www.e-aps.org/upload/pdf/aps-2021-00262.pdf
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