Literature DB >> 22562711

Cross-border flow of health information: is 'privacy by design' enough? Privacy performance assessment in EUBIROD.

Concetta Tania Di Iorio1, Fabrizio Carinci, Massimo Brillante, Joseph Azzopardi, Peter Beck, Natasa Bratina, Scott G Cunningham, Carine De Beaufort, Noemi Debacker, Przemyslawa Jarosz-Chobot, Michael Jecht, Ulf Lindblad, Tony Moulton, Želiko Metelko, Attila Nagy, George Olympios, Simion Pruna, Michael Røder, Svein Skeie, Fred Storms, Massimo Massi Benedetti.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The EUBIROD project aims to perform a cross-border flow of diabetes information across 19 European countries using the BIRO information system, which embeds privacy principles and data protection mechanisms in its architecture (privacy by design). A specific task of EUBIROD was to investigate the variability in the implementation of the EU Data Protection Directive (DPD) across participating centres.
METHODS: Compliance with privacy requirements was assessed by means of a specific questionnaire administered to all participating diabetes registers. Items included relevant issues e.g. patient consent, accountability of data custodian, communication (openness) and complaint procedures (challenging compliance), authority to disclose, accuracy, access and use of personal information, and anonymization. The identification of an ad hoc scoring system and statistical software allowed an overall quali-quantitative analysis and independent evaluation of questionnaire responses, automated through a dedicated IT platform ('privacy performance assessment').
RESULTS: A total of 18 diabetes registers from different countries completed the survey. Over 50% of the registers recorded a maximum score for accountability, openness, anonymization and challenging compliance. Low average values were found for disclosure and disposition, access, consent, use of personal information and accuracy. A high heterogeneity was found for anonymization, consent, accuracy and access.
CONCLUSIONS: The novel method of privacy performance assessment realized in EUBIROD may improve the respect of privacy in each data source, reduce overall variability in the implementation of privacy principles and favour a sound and legitimate cross-border exchange of high quality data across Europe.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22562711     DOI: 10.1093/eurpub/cks043

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Public Health        ISSN: 1101-1262            Impact factor:   3.367


  5 in total

1.  Building a Privacy, Ethics, and Data Access Framework for Real World Computerised Medical Record System Data: A Delphi Study. Contribution of the Primary Health Care Informatics Working Group.

Authors:  H Liyanage; S-T Liaw; C T Di Iorio; C Kuziemsky; R Schreiber; A L Terry; S de Lusignan
Journal:  Yearb Med Inform       Date:  2016-11-10

2.  Adherence to General Diabetes and Foot Care Processes, with Prompt Referral, Are Associated with Amputation-Free Survival in People with Type 2 Diabetes and Foot Ulcers: A Scottish National Registry Analysis.

Authors:  Bernardo Meza-Torres; Scott G Cunningham; Christian Heiss; Mark Joy; Michael Feher; Graham P Leese; Simon de Lusignan; Fabrizio Carinci
Journal:  J Diabetes Res       Date:  2022-06-14       Impact factor: 4.061

Review 3.  Data Safe Havens in health research and healthcare.

Authors:  Paul R Burton; Madeleine J Murtagh; Andy Boyd; James B Williams; Edward S Dove; Susan E Wallace; Anne-Marie Tassé; Julian Little; Rex L Chisholm; Amadou Gaye; Kristian Hveem; Anthony J Brookes; Pat Goodwin; Jon Fistein; Martin Bobrow; Bartha M Knoppers
Journal:  Bioinformatics       Date:  2015-06-25       Impact factor: 6.937

4.  The relationship between non-permanent migration and non-communicable chronic disease outcomes for cancer, heart disease and diabetes - a systematic review.

Authors:  Karen H Wang; Zoé M Hendrickson; Cynthia A Brandt; Marcella Nunez-Smith
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2019-04-15       Impact factor: 3.295

5.  Ethical Use of Electronic Health Record Data and Artificial Intelligence: Recommendations of the Primary Care Informatics Working Group of the International Medical Informatics Association.

Authors:  Siaw-Teng Liaw; Harshana Liyanage; Craig Kuziemsky; Amanda L Terry; Richard Schreiber; Jitendra Jonnagaddala; Simon de Lusignan
Journal:  Yearb Med Inform       Date:  2020-04-17
  5 in total

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