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Accepted for/Published in: Interactive Journal of Medical Research

Date Submitted: Oct 7, 2024
Date Accepted: Jul 29, 2025

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Community Comfort With Automatic Sharing of Race, Ethnicity, and Language Data Between Health Care Settings: Cross-Sectional Study

Brazer N, Tessier-Sherman B, Galusha D, Suttiratana SC, Liu C, Kim KK, Abraham M, Nunez-Smith M, Wang KH

Community Comfort With Automatic Sharing of Race, Ethnicity, and Language Data Between Health Care Settings: Cross-Sectional Study

Interact J Med Res 2025;14:e67288

DOI: 10.2196/67288

PMID: 41052417

PMCID: 12500222

Community Comfort with Automatic Sharing of Race, Ethnicity, and Language Data Between Healthcare Settings: A Cross-Sectional Study

  • Noah Brazer; 
  • Baylah Tessier-Sherman; 
  • Deron Galusha; 
  • Sakinah C Suttiratana; 
  • Corrine Liu; 
  • Katherine K Kim; 
  • Mark Abraham; 
  • Marcella Nunez-Smith; 
  • Karen H Wang

ABSTRACT

Background:

Little is known regarding patient attitudes toward automatic sharing of race, ethnicity, and language (REL) data in healthcare settings despite the universal practice of data sharing across healthcare institutions and providers.

Objective:

Assess public comfort with disclosing and automatically sharing REL data in healthcare settings.

Methods:

Using the 2022 DataHaven Community Wellbeing Survey from 1,034 adult Connecticut residents, we examined factors associated with public comfort with disclosing and automatically sharing REL data across healthcare settings. We generated unadjusted and adjusted logistic models to examine associations between factors and responses to the data-sharing questions.

Results:

Hispanic/Latino respondents were less willing to disclose REL data compared to White respondents (p<0.001). Individuals who sometimes trust healthcare providers (p=0.019) or rarely/never (p=0.040) were less willing to disclose REL data than those who almost always. African American/Black (p=0.004) and American Indian/Alaska Native (p<0.001) individuals were less likely to share REL data automatically than White individuals. Those with poor/fair self-rated health (SRH) versus very good/excellent were less likely to automatically share REL data (p=0.010). Individuals with less trust in their healthcare providers were less likely to automatically share REL data.

Conclusions:

Racial and ethnic identity, SRH, and trust in healthcare providers affect willingness to share REL information with providers and other health systems.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Brazer N, Tessier-Sherman B, Galusha D, Suttiratana SC, Liu C, Kim KK, Abraham M, Nunez-Smith M, Wang KH

Community Comfort With Automatic Sharing of Race, Ethnicity, and Language Data Between Health Care Settings: Cross-Sectional Study

Interact J Med Res 2025;14:e67288

DOI: 10.2196/67288

PMID: 41052417

PMCID: 12500222

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