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According to Charles Cooley, we base our image on what we think other people see (Cooley 1902). We imagine how we must appear to others, then react to this speculation. We don certain clothes, prepare our hair in a particular manner, wear makeup, use cologne, and the like—all with the notion that our presentation of ourselves is going to affect how others perceive us. We expect a certain reaction, and, if lucky, we get the one we desire and feel good about it. But more than that, Cooley...
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To recognise oneself.

Uta Karacaoğlan1

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Protecting patient privacy in clinical reports requires a multi-stage anonymization process. This method ensures that while patients may recognize themselves, third parties cannot identify them, safeguarding sensitive clinical data.

Keywords:
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Area of Science:

  • Psychology
  • Clinical Psychology
  • Psychoanalysis

Background:

  • Publishing clinical reports raises privacy concerns regarding patient identification.
  • Preventing third-party identification of patients in clinical narratives is crucial for ethical practice.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To propose a multi-stage process for anonymizing clinical reports.
  • To enhance the protection of patient confidentiality in published psychoanalytic work.

Main Methods:

  • Documenting the clinical event as a subjective narrative by the analyst.
  • Abstracting general insights and identifying underlying structures from the initial narrative.
  • Performing anonymization in a third step, illustrating the gained knowledge with a clinical vignette.

Main Results:

  • The proposed multi-stage process involves interpretation, abstraction, and anonymization.
  • Anonymization effectiveness may depend on the third party's familiarity with the patient.

Conclusions:

  • A staged approach to anonymization can help protect patient identity in clinical publications.
  • Careful consideration of the anonymization process is necessary to balance clinical insight with privacy protection.