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Data Protection and the Promotion of Health Research

Overview
Journal Healthc Policy
Specialty Public Health
Date 2009 Mar 24
PMID 19305715
Citations 1
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Abstract

This paper challenges the argument that data protection legislation may harm research by unduly restricting the flow of personal health information. I unpack the assumption that privacy is an individual right that must give way to research as a social good, and explore how data protection laws facilitate the flow of information for research purposes. I conclude that researchers should embrace data protection laws because they help construct trust in research practices, mitigate the commercial imperatives that flow from the fact that research is a public-private enterprise and protect the accuracy of data. Good research design should recognize that privacy is a social value and an essential element of psychological health and social relationships. And since research databases do not exist in isolation, researchers must respect the fact that the non-consensual flow of information poses risks of harm, including the secondary use of health research databases for social control, that must be managed.

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McRae A, Archambault P, Fok P, Wiemer H, Morrison L, Herder M CMAJ. 2022; 194(27):E943-E947.

PMID: 35851526 PMC: 9299746. DOI: 10.1503/cmaj.211712.

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