E-mail privacy statement
Some research studies at Group Health Research Institute (GHRI) offer study participants the option of communicating with research project staff via electronic mail (e-mail) over the Internet.
If you have an Internet e-mail address and would like to take advantage of this service, please be aware of the following risks:
- Multiple people may have access to a single e-mail account, including your family members. Your employer may have the right to look at any messages sent to your office e-mail address. You may wish to have the study staff person respond to you at a different address.
- E-mail may be inadvertently sent to the wrong address.
- Messages may be edited and/or forwarded to others without the original author's knowledge or permission.
- E-mail is not guaranteed to be read by the addressee within a specified time period, but project staff will make every effort to read messages within three days. If the staff person is on vacation, you may receive a message reporting this to you.
- Messages sent via the Internet cannot be considered confidential but are handled as confidential once received by the research project staff.
In addition, please observe the following rules:
- E-mail may not be used to communicate emergencies or urgent messages. If you are experiencing a sudden or severe change in your health, or otherwise need an immediate response, please contact your primary health care provider's office by telephone.
- Please do not use e-mail to send or request very sensitive information. Group Health cannot and does not guarantee the confidentiality of any messages being sent over the Internet.
- It is helpful to include your full name in the body of the message, not the subject line. This helps protect your privacy.
- If you do not receive a response in a timely manner, you should call the study office. A study staff person may be out of the office and unable to respond to e-mail. Someone else from the project staff may be able to help you.
- Medically relevant e-mail messages are kept in locked study files and will not be included in your permanent medical record without your consent.
