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Identifying High-Priority Ethical Challenges for Precision Emergency Medicine: Nominal Group Study

Authors :
Christian Rose
Emily Shearer
Isabela Woller
Ashley Foster
Nicholas Ashenburg
Ireh Kim
Jennifer Newberry
Source :
JMIR Formative Research, Vol 9, Pp e68371-e68371 (2025)
Publication Year :
2025
Publisher :
JMIR Publications, 2025.

Abstract

Abstract BackgroundPrecision medicine promises to revolutionize health care by providing the right care to the right patient at the right time. However, the emergency department’s unique mandate to treat “anyone, anywhere, anytime” creates critical tensions with precision medicine’s requirements for comprehensive patient data and computational analysis. As emergency departments serve as health care’s safety net and provide a growing proportion of acute care in America, identifying and addressing the ethical challenges of implementing precision medicine in this setting is crucial to prevent exacerbation of existing health care disparities. The rapid advancement of precision medicine technologies makes it imperative to understand these challenges before widespread implementation in emergency care settings. ObjectiveThis study aimed to identify high priority ethical concerns facing the implementation of precision medicine in the emergency department. MethodsWe conducted a qualitative study using a modified nominal group technique (NGT) with emergency physicians who had previous knowledge of precision medicine concepts. The NGT process consisted of four phases: (1) silent generation of ideas, (2) round-robin sharing of ideas, (3) structured discussion and clarification, and (4) thematic grouping of priorities. Participants represented diverse practice settings (county hospital, community hospital, academic center, and integrated managed care consortium) and subspecialties (education, ethics, pediatrics, diversity, equity, inclusion, and informatics) across various career stages from residents to late-career physicians. ResultsA total of 12 emergency physicians identified 82 initial challenges during individual ideation, which were consolidated to 48 unique challenges after removing duplicates and combining related items. The average participant contributed 6.8 (SD 2.9) challenges. These challenges were organized into a framework with 3 themes: values, privacy, and justice. The framework identified the need to address these themes across 3 time points of the precision medicine process: acquisition of data, actualization in the care setting, and the after effects of its use. This systematic organization revealed interrelated concerns spanning from data collection and bias to implementation challenges and long-term consequences for health care equity. ConclusionsOur study developed a novel framework that maps critical ethical challenges across 3 domains (values, privacy, and justice) and 3 temporal stages of precision medicine implementation. This framework identifies high-priority areas for future research and policy development, particularly around data representation, privacy protection, and equitable access. Successfully addressing these challenges is essential to realize precision medicine’s potential while preserving emergency medicine’s core mission as health care’s safety net.

Subjects

Subjects :
Medicine

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2561326X
Volume :
9
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
JMIR Formative Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.141d7e6ef9ad428c81be445d21741fc8
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2196/68371