Professional use of the Internet: Legal and Ethical Issues in a Member Care Environment

2001 ◽  
Vol 29 (2) ◽  
pp. 106-120 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher H. Rosik ◽  
Roger K. Brown
Author(s):  
W. Benjamin Porr ◽  
Robert E. Ployhart

This chapter presents a framework through which ethical Internet-based organizational research can be conducted. Organizational constraints that promote the use of the Internet for applied research are identified, followed by potential benefits and drawbacks. The chapter then discusses the ethical issues that must be considered when conducting Internet-based organizational research; these include concerns about privacy, confidentiality, anonymity, informed consent and providing a debriefing. A case study illustrates these issues, and the chapter concludes with directions for future research. Numerous tables and figures are used to serve as a quick reference for the key points of the chapter.


2011 ◽  
pp. 138-149
Author(s):  
William H. Friedman

This chapter will discuss problems arising from employee use of the Internet for personal pursuits during paid working hours. Since there are both financial and non-financial consequences of such behavior (Friedman, 2000), it is worthwhile to evaluate existing attempts to deal with this problem and suggest some new ones. Nevertheless, virtual absenteeism is not a totally negative phenomenon; hence, one needs to give a fair hearing to the claims of the employees engaged in this activity. It is not necessarily an economic loss to the employer when employees take care of private matters or even play on the Internet, if it is within reason and results in a refreshed approach to the job at hand. Still, if the employee is excessively occupied with non-business Internet activity, there is no doubt a corresponding decrease in the amount of conscious attention given to the processing of organizational concerns. Moreover, ethical issues emerge concerning the misuse of time, avoidance of responsibility and violation of employee-employer contracts, implicit or explicit. Since the employer is defraying the cost of both the hardware and software involved, Internet misuse results in expenses far exceeding losses from such minor trespasses as personal telephone calls and company stationery misappropriated for personal reasons. Further, diversionary materials such as magazines and games brought to the workplace by employees which were paid out of their own pockets, while clearly resulting in lost time for the employer, at least did not require highly sophisticated and expensive technology to support the diversions. Finally, it is necessary to show that the sheer scale of modern slacking requires very special measures that consider not only financial, but legal, social, moral and psychological ramifications as well.


2017 ◽  
Vol 675 (1) ◽  
pp. 122-137 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert M. Goerge

The technical challenges of accessing large administrative datasets are easily addressed with the advances in data security, computational resources, and the Internet. The most vexing barriers are legal and ethical issues, and control of the data by the agencies that generate it. This article describes those issues and promotes the notion that partnerships with the data providers are necessary to facilitate access to researchers, both inside and outside government, but also to provide benefits, in the form of evidence, research, and information to the data providers themselves. Ultimately, training of all stakeholders around the secure and responsible use of data and appropriate data stewardship is necessary to facilitate the increased use of administrative data that is required to develop evidence that will have an impact on government services and programs for individuals and families.


1995 ◽  
Vol 23 (3) ◽  
pp. 230-235 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alice G. Gosfield

For a health lawyer in private practice, the substance of any discussion of managed care turns on the developments in the health care marketplace. Without a doubt, the industry is rapidly moving from one frame of reference to a radically different one. It is no surprise then, that, in consulting me, my clients want to know what is and what will be, not what should be. They want at least to survive, if not be successful, in the whirlwind of restructuring that offers no clear choices, no clear outcomes, and significant legal liabilities if they do not perform effectively. What I want to address in this article is how the consolidation of medical practices and the integration of delivery structures has outpaced the legal system's ability to regulate or guide the emerging health care market. This gap leaves physicians without proper legal guidance on how to balance their duties to their patients and their contractual obligations to managed care organizations (MCOs). A brief review of the case law to date highlights some of the legal and ethical issues that arise for physicians who practice in this environment.


2011 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
pp. 99-112
Author(s):  
Ilana S. Lehmann ◽  
William Crimando

The Internet has become an integral part of the practice of rehabilitation counseling. To identify potential ethical issues regarding the use of the Internet by counselors, two studies were conducted. In Study 1, we surveyed a national sample of rehabilitation counselors regarding their use of technology in their work and home settings. Results suggested that all counselors use email and find information on the Internet, and some also use the Internet to socialize. Some online activities in which counselors engage raise ethical concerns. Study 2 was a content analysis of ethical codes of three national counseling associations and three states that license rehabilitation counselors for the amount of guidance these codes provide regarding Internet activities. Results indicated that although the ethical use of technology has been identified in the codes, there are still areas in which the guidance is only indirect at best.


2002 ◽  
Vol 8 (I1) ◽  
pp. 24-25

Metallographic Specimen Preparation, Organizer: George Vander VoortProblem Solving with the ExpertsAddressing Issues in Digital Imaging for the Microscopist: II, Organizer: Jose MascorroCore Facility Management, Organizer: Debby ShermanTechnologists\' Forum Roundtable Discussion: Legal and Ethical Issues of Data Ownership, Organizer: Jeanette KilliusTechnologists\' Forum Special Topics: Immunology 101: Back to Basics, Organizer: Jeanette KilliusComputer Workshop/Software Exchange and the Internet Cafe, Organizers: Nestor Zaluzec and John MansfieldMicroscopy for Canadian schools—A Discussion of Ways and Means, Organizer: Caroline SchooleyStereology: Quantitative Characterization of Metallic and Ceramic Microstructures Considering Different Grain Shapes, Organizer: Frank Mücklich


2000 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 7-19 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eve M. Caudill ◽  
Patrick E. Murphy

Consumer privacy is a public policy issue that has received substantial attention over the last thirty years. The phenomenal growth of the Internet has spawned several new concerns about protecting the privacy of consumers. The authors examine both historical and conceptual analyses of privacy and discuss domestic and international regulatory and self-regulatory approaches to confronting privacy issues on the Internet. The authors also review ethical theories that apply to consumer privacy and offer specific suggestions for corporate ethical policy and public policy as well as a research agenda.


2021 ◽  
Vol 66 (Special Issue) ◽  
pp. 78-78
Author(s):  
Nicolas Foureur ◽  
◽  

"A specialized service for anonymous and free HIV and STD (sexual transmitted diseases) screening asked us, as a Clinical Ethics Centre, to reflect on the opportunity of making the results available to patients on the internet. Several options are possible: the provision might apply only to negative results or also to positive results, only for STD or also for HIV, to all patients or according to their own choice. In addition, if we consider that patients can manage alone the reception of their results, and to learn that they need to be treated, they might even choose to do the screening alone. Based on the caregivers’ appreciation of these issues (secretary, laboratory manager, nurses and physicians) and the work of the multidisciplinary clinical ethics group, this presentation will discuss: - The ethical issues raised by these differtents possibilities. Do they contribute to a higher level of empowerment for patients? Do they constitute a benefit or a risk for either single patients or public health? What ethical considerations should ground the doctor-patient relationship in this context? - The impact of the use of the internet or other technological means of communication in medicine. In the specific case of sexual health, technology can question the particular status with which information related to HIV testing is processed. Perhaps these new procedures might help to fight the stigma related to HIV by treating the result of the screening process like that of other STD. "


Author(s):  
Maureen C. Kenny ◽  
Maria Santacruz

The use of technology is an emerging trend in the field of counselling. Despite advances in this area, there is a dearth of literature on the ethical use of online counselling. This chapter addresses ethical issues and concerns for counsellors conducting online counselling as well as the advantages and disadvantages of such an approach. Since the use of the Internet allows for global use of counselling services, this chapter, among others, examines various ethical standards of counselling that have been established across the world, and to this end, guidelines created by several countries’ professional associations are reviewed. Practical issues, including the training that may be necessary for counsellors to engage in this counselling mode are also addressed.


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