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Clinical competency

Confidentiality, privacy, and research data protection

Teaches protection of participant identity, sensitive clinical or occupational information, recordings, and research data. The competency covers coded identifiers, restricted access, secure handling, confidentiality safeguards, and privacy-preserving documentation.

Primary clinical guidelineModern clinical

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Guidelines

53

Courses

0

Providers

0

Protocols

7

Classification

Source quality

Lab manualProtocol paperSOP / guidebookTrial supplement

Also known as

Confidential handling of participant data and identityConfidential intake and privacy protectionConfidential record keepingConfidential recordkeepingConfidential therapeutic conductConfidentiality and data handlingConfidentiality and data privacyConfidentiality and data protectionConfidentiality and data stewardshipConfidentiality and data stewardship awarenessConfidentiality and discharge coordinationConfidentiality and HIPAA complianceConfidentiality and PHI protectionConfidentiality and protection of participant dataConfidentiality and recording stewardshipConfidentiality and responsible handling of recorded materialConfidentiality and restricted allocation accessConfidentiality protectionDocumentation of recordings and qualitative materialInformed consent and research communicationMaintain confidentiality and controlled data accessMaintain privacy and confidentialityPrivacy and confidentiality protectionPrivacy and confidentiality stewardshipSession recording and confidentiality management

Across the manuals

The manuals converge on a strong expectation that participant identity, clinical information, and research records are kept confidential through coded or study number based identifiers, separate storage of linking information, and restricted access. Across the extracts, the common pattern is secure handling of paper and electronic records, password protected or encrypted systems, and limiting disclosure to authorised study, regulatory, or safety related purposes only. They also converge on careful handling of recordings and other highly sensitive materials. Several sources treat audio and video as especially sensitive, with secure storage, restricted access, de identification where possible, and explicit consent or limits on later use. Many manuals also note that confidentiality is not absolute, and that disclosure may occur in limited legal, regulatory, or safety circumstances. The manuals differ mainly in emphasis and context. Some focus on group settings and shared disclosures, some on occupational sensitivity for clinicians, some on biomarker, genomic, or HIV related information, and others on special handling of recordings, documentary footage, or digital phenotyping data. A few sources also add privacy related features such as private phone or video assessments, participant rights to examine data, or support for confidentiality certificates and specific legal frameworks such as HIPAA, GDPR, PHIPA, or local data protection laws.

In practice

What it looks like on the ground

  • Uses participant code numbers or study IDs instead of names in records
  • Stores identifying information separately in locked, password protected, or encrypted systems
  • Restricts access to recordings, source records, and linking files to authorised personnel only
  • Avoids including personal health information in external safety reports or publications

Synthesised from the linked source documents; refreshed as the library updates.

Linked sources

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Linked guidelines (53)

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