The Problem of Fairness in Synthetic Healthcare Data

Authors
Bhanot, Karan
Qi, Miao
Erickson, John S.
Guyon, Isabelle
Bennett, Kristin P.
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Issue Date
2021-09
Keywords
synthetic data , fairness , health inequities
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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States
Full Citation
Bhanot, Karan Qi M, Erickson JS, Guyon I, Bennett KP. “The Problem of Fairness in Synthetic Healthcare Data.” Entropy (Basel, Switzerland) vol. 23,9 1165. 4, doi:10.3390/e2309116. September 2021†
Abstract
Access to healthcare data such as electronic health records (EHR) is often restricted by laws established to protect patient privacy. These restrictions hinder the reproducibility of existing results based on private healthcare data and also limit new research. Synthetically-generated healthcare data solve this problem by preserving privacy and enabling researchers and policymakers to drive decisions and methods based on realistic data. Healthcare data can include information about multiple in- and out- patient visits of patients, making it a time-series dataset which is often influenced by protected attributes like age, gender, race etc. The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated health inequities, with certain subgroups experiencing poorer outcomes and less access to healthcare. To combat these inequities, synthetic data must “fairly” represent diverse minority subgroups such that the conclusions drawn on synthetic data are correct and the results can be generalized to real data. In this article, we develop two fairness metrics for synthetic data, and analyze all subgroups defined by protected attributes to analyze the bias in three published synthetic research datasets. These covariate-level disparity metrics revealed that synthetic data may not be representative at the univariate and multivariate subgroup-levels and thus, fairness should be addressed when developing data generation methods. We discuss the need for measuring fairness in synthetic healthcare data to enable the development of robust machine learning models to create more equitable synthetic healthcare datasets.
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Entropy (Basel, Switzerland)
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