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1 remental Databases" that maintain individual confidentiality.
2 invited from all parties with an interest in confidentiality.
3 seek health care from physicians who assure confidentiality.
4 sing cultural differences, human rights, and confidentiality.
5 ntiality, or a physician who did not mention confidentiality.
6 ation making co-members liable for violating confidentiality.
7 view sets, and patient consent, privacy, and confidentiality.
8 were exceedingly concerned about breaches of confidentiality.
9 ortal accounts could compromise adolescents' confidentiality.
10 lexible schedules, and a profound desire for confidentiality.
11 y while the ECC provides strong security and confidentiality.
12 ward key secrecy, safeguarding communication confidentiality.
13 te adolescent accounts to protect adolescent confidentiality.
14 "fully synthetic" data to protect respondent confidentiality.
15 eld by multiple entities while ensuring data confidentiality.
16 generally emphasizing accuracy, consent, and confidentiality.
17 al violations, and none violated participant confidentiality.
18 t reporting is a breach of physician-patient confidentiality.
19 om sample survey that guaranteed respondents confidentiality.
20 Survey respondents were guaranteed confidentiality.
21 y conflict with the duty to maintain patient confidentiality.
22 outside contractor for enhanced assurance of confidentiality.
23 advancement of science or the protection of confidentiality.
24 es, decreased confidence, and concerns about confidentiality.
25 third parties, and inadequate safeguards for confidentiality.
26 guard patient rights to informed consent and confidentiality.
27 ationship and raise ethical issues regarding confidentiality.
28 ations concerning anonymity, neutrality, and confidentiality.
31 intoxication (73%; 35/48), violating patient confidentiality (65%; 31/48), and using discriminatory s
32 heard a physician who assured unconditional confidentiality, a physician who assured conditional con
34 tation of privacy-preserving QML will ensure confidentiality and accurate learning on NISQ technology
35 dinating Center had a Federal Certificate of Confidentiality and approval from each institution's rev
37 gation, support, open communication systems, confidentiality and discretion essential to delivering q
38 ded service-users concerns about the lack of confidentiality and feelings of shame related to experie
40 nting processes and a Federal Certificate of Confidentiality and other protections for participating
42 ntric and diverse datasets mainly stems from confidentiality and privacy concerns around sharing medi
43 onship, patient rights and responsibilities, confidentiality and privacy, resource allocation and ste
44 ved that the rule has enhanced participants' confidentiality and privacy, whereas the HIPAA Privacy R
45 g care, and legislative reforms that protect confidentiality and reduce discriminatory practices in l
47 ify those involved in the TM process, ensure confidentiality and use communication channels that full
48 as reviewed for issues of patient safety and confidentiality and was approved by the Institutional Re
49 ese resources, we risk violating participant confidentiality and wasting a significant amount of time
50 ing that patients are aware of the limits on confidentiality, and by avoiding unnecessary breaches of
52 requires community engagement, assurance of confidentiality, and creative recruitment and retention
53 ess to care, taking extra measures to ensure confidentiality, and dispelling the myth that high rates
56 isitors' and patients' rights to privacy and confidentiality, and provide effective and secure means
57 ocedures for protecting privacy and ensuring confidentiality; and partnerships among providers, resea
59 urther investigation is needed to identify a confidentiality assurance statement that explains the le
60 smission should not jeopardize the security, confidentiality, authenticity, authorization, or integri
61 ke benefit of its security features, such as confidentiality, authenticity, immutability, integrity,
62 Traditional ethical and legal standards of confidentiality between physicians and their patients ar
63 to assess electronic data files for risk of confidentiality breach based on unique combinations of k
64 eful data tool that can quantify the risk of confidentiality breach of electronic health databases, i
67 erestimates because of underreporting due to confidentiality concerns and lack of biopsy confirmation
69 t beliefs and explanatory models of illness, confidentiality concerns, stigma, reluctance to seek psy
73 caused by researchers' commercial interests, confidentiality, control over research uses and material
74 when implementing such an approach to ensure confidentiality, data protection, and meaningful interpr
75 CI, 1.13-1.65), conversations with explicit confidentiality discussions (OR = 4.33; 95% CI, 2.58-7.2
76 al norms valuing masculinity, concerns about confidentiality during HIV testing or treatment, low acc
77 in ethical conduct: medical decision making, confidentiality, fiduciary obligations (including confli
80 ive in this digital age in order to maintain confidentiality, honesty, and trust in the medical profe
81 to review federal and state laws relevant to confidentiality in group therapy with impaired physician
82 einstated, state laws that ensure adolescent confidentiality in obtaining family planning services ma
84 ise a new drug exemplifies the importance of confidentiality in the era of managed care and computers
88 ditional groups, assurances of unconditional confidentiality increased the number of adolescents will
89 This paper deals with ensuring the image's Confidentiality-Integrity-Authenticity (CIA triad) aspec
96 ogate consent are acceptable; (viii) protect confidentiality; (ix) not impose costs on subjects' esta
101 emoved-until it is generally agreed that the confidentiality methods proposed here are appropriate an
102 at, with proper measures in place to protect confidentiality, most genetic research on human biospeci
104 ly when their responses afford them complete confidentiality, not when their responses are simply bli
105 concerns regarding economic discrimination, confidentiality of data, and trust in entities conductin
108 lishing a clear commitment to protecting the confidentiality of enrollee information; and (7) careful
110 s ethical obligations related to privacy and confidentiality of individuals and respect for the popul
111 of pedigrees poses a risk to the privacy and confidentiality of individuals depicted in the diagrams.
112 ethical and legal issues such as privacy and confidentiality of information are being addressed as we
113 of gun restriction, reporting practices, the confidentiality of medical information, and the immunity
116 an communication, 2) ensure the security and confidentiality of patient information, 3) create user i
119 s are described in which courts affirmed the confidentiality of peer review conducted by journals.
121 te and federal laws are available to protect confidentiality of professional and lay research partici
123 to adequately address the new threats to the confidentiality of respondent data in spatially explicit
124 The use of formal privacy to protect the confidentiality of responses in the 2020 Decennial Censu
125 ountry where the government might breach the confidentiality of study results or where results might
126 ve been published to protect the privacy and confidentiality of subjects, but the influence of these
127 hed recommendations and risk the privacy and confidentiality of subjects, often without informed cons
128 the manuscripts' characteristics breaks the confidentiality of the author-editor-reviewer relationsh
129 strict controls for protecting security and confidentiality of the data; and (7) it specifies protoc
131 understanding and upholding Certificates of Confidentiality, offering individual research results re
132 e supports the notion that perceived lack of confidentiality on the part of the health care provider
133 tiality, a physician who assured conditional confidentiality, or a physician who did not mention conf
134 s, informed consent, vulnerable populations, confidentiality, participant burden, disaster research r
136 ided access to genetic counseling, 69% had a confidentiality policy, and 45% required informed consen
137 provide empirical data concerning the actual confidentiality practices and experiences of group thera
138 al with their own anxiety and issues such as confidentiality, privacy, empathy, and intrusion by a ph
139 ased and living donation related to privacy, confidentiality, professionalism, and informed consent,
140 ansmitted infection/HIV services and related confidentiality protections in all 50 states and the Dis
141 erview Survey (NHIS) years, which because of confidentiality protections was made available only thro
142 rds for sensitive medical conditions, strong confidentiality protections, and restrictions on adverti
143 erests, role separation, goal clarification, confidentiality protections, proper timing, and ongoing
144 was obtained from all subjects, and patient confidentiality protocols were followed in compliance wi
146 U method enables one to be assured of record confidentiality, provides flexibility to adjust record u
147 bsolute numbers were rounded to base 100 for confidentiality purposes, and percentages were based on
149 vercomes many practical obstacles related to confidentiality, regulation, and proprietary interests.
151 they describe the evaluation process of the confidentiality risk of adding a county-based socioecono
153 ethical protections for patients, including confidentiality, shared medical decision making, and res
155 on would be disseminated; to further enhance confidentiality, survey operations were conducted by a c
156 rriers related to pediatric data sharing and confidentiality that was administered to health care org
157 ality science using such data: protection of confidentiality, the social-spatial linkage, data sharin
158 a for nonclinical purposes, implications for confidentiality, the use of social media in patient educ
160 ns offering a varying, randomized, degree of confidentiality to respondents in a socioeconomically di
161 ocal health agencies, and the duty to breach confidentiality to warn of imminent harm has been the su
166 hich many live with their abuser, protecting confidentiality when breaches could provoke an attack, a
167 s such as profitability, risk, security, and confidentiality, which limit students' opportunities to
168 tion available is the Federal Certificate of Confidentiality, which supersedes state statutory protec
169 Policies should be crafted that protect confidentiality while allowing appropriate use of person
170 sician-physician communication that preserve confidentiality while best using these technologies.
173 xplains the legal and ethical limitations of confidentiality without decreasing adolescents' likeliho
174 etworking and coordination while maintaining confidentiality without the need for a central coordinat