Ethics Guidelines for Development and Use of Health Assessments
Used with permission of The Society of Prospective Medicine Board of
Directors.
Copyright The Society of Prospective Medicine, 1999.
Introduction
Dedicated to advancing the development, utilization, and evaluation of prospective medicine strategies, The Society of Prospective Medicine (SPM) advocates the following ethics guidelines to assist developers and administrators of a wide variety of health assessments (HAs) in making appropriate decisions in construction and use of HA instruments. Health assessments include instruments known as health risk appraisals or health risk assessments (HRAs). Health status assessments (HSAs), various lifestyles-specific (e.g., nutrition, stress and physical activity) assessments instruments, wellness, and behavioral/habit inventories. In the last 40 years, health assessments technology has proliferated and diversified. Today, health assessment tools are an essential component in the planning and delivery of health care and promotion programs in heath care, business, industrial, and educational settings. Although the purpose of health assessment instruments may differ, the ethical considerations for their use are remarkably similar. The Society of Prospective Medicine establishes these general guidelines to both minimize the potential harm from misuse and to enhance the potential benefits of health assessments:
- Maintenance or improvements of personal health and quality of life, and
- Ability to establish disease and health risk tracking for improved care.
| General Ethics Guidelines |
The
following seven guidelines defined by SPM help to protect the
rights and safety of individual participants and to facilitate
the appropriate use of health assessment instruments by both
individuals by both individuals and organizations.
|
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Page last updated: May 22, 2007
Content Source: Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity and Obesity, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion

