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The data strategy: a blueprint for the evolution of a trustworthy data system?

The National Data Guardian shares her views on the government's new health and care data strategy: Data Saves Lives: Reshaping Health and Social Care with Data.

Dr Nicola Byrne, National Data Guardian for Health and Social Care

I believe that our ability to successfully achieve better things through data and digital hinges on the strength of the relationships that will deliver this change. And whether it바카라 사이트s ICSs working together to innovate well, or organisations looking at how best to engage the public on data matters, understanding, trust and respect are central to these relationships. It is with this belief in mind that I read and considered the government바카라 사이트s new data strategy, Data Saves Lives 바카라 사이트 asking to what degree the commitments it makes provide a blueprint for the evolution of a trustworthy data ecosystem, and whether it provides for all of the conditions that must be met in order to create an environment in which innovation can flourish.

I had that the importance of public trust needed a greater emphasis, and so was pleased by the strong focus it was given in the published version, alongside the recognition that 바카라 사이트The data we talk about is not an abstract thing: there is an individual, a person, a name behind each piece of data.바카라 사이트 This is important. People need to know that the government understands just how unique this highly private information is 바카라 사이트 and that as such, commitments will be needed to demonstrate how confidentiality will be protected and respected. The data pact (or 바카라 사이트charter바카라 사이트) it is proposing to co-author with the public will be a good start.

Also important was the government바카라 사이트s admission that it made mistakes with the programme by taking people바카라 사이트s trust for granted, and that it needed to do better to rebuild and strengthen that trust. The strategy outlines that to tackle this, it will:

  • keep data safe and secure
  • be open about how data is used
  • ensure fair terms from data partnerships
  • give the public a bigger say in how data is used
  • improve the public바카라 사이트s access to their own data

Maslow바카라 사이트s 바카라 사이트hierarchy of need바카라 사이트 is useful here. It is a concept from developmental psychology that describes the conditions needed for humans to reach their full potential. It is visualised as a layered pyramid: at the bottom are our most basic requirements (food and shelter) with successive layers incorporating more complex emotional and social needs. I found it helpful to think about the data landscape in these terms. What are the conditions that must be satisfied before our health and care data ecosystem can reach full maturity in terms of its trustworthiness to patients and professionals alike? And does what the strategy is proposing sufficiently meet them?

I would suggest that in this parallel, those conditions are:

  • legal compliance
  • strong privacy protections
  • a commitment to transparency
  • establishing and demonstrating public benefit
  • ensuring appropriate mechanisms for choice
  • sharing power with the public

At the most basic level, a data system must demonstrate legal compliance. However, whilst lawful data use is a necessary foundation, it is insufficient alone. Previous failed national data initiatives have been lawful. To earn trust, organisations need to do more than not break the law, as the final version of the data strategy implicitly recognises.

Strong privacy protections

All health and care data is collected within a relationship of trust. Maintaining confidentiality is essential for people to feel able to share information with those caring for them; the consequences of not doing so are great. Given this, the strategy바카라 사이트s commitment to privacy enhancing technology is reassuring.

In particular, the shift towards data access in secure data environments (SDEs) 바카라 사이트 of which trusted research environments (TREs) are a subset 바카라 사이트 and away from routine disseminations is a significant development and a move that I strongly support. The ethical framework that underpins the use of the SDEs through the use of the is also key. For those who haven바카라 사이트t read it, what Professor Ben Goldacre says about TREs in his is very informative. It is important that the government gets the governance wrapper and accreditation framework right for SDEs so that standards and safeguards are consistent, and what is in place as the 바카라 사이트gold standard바카라 사이트 in the national SDE is scalable and achievable elsewhere.

A commitment to transparency

We know that whilst privacy remains a key concern, it is not the only concern that people have. There is good evidence, including from empirical research during the pandemic, that how data is being used and why, and who is making decisions about it 바카라 사이트 and what motivates those decisions 바카라 사이트 are also questions that matter. I바카라 사이트d therefore place transparency as the next condition to be met. This includes good public engagement and dialogue 바카라 사이트 providing people with clear, accessible information about who will be accessing their data and why, the safeguards that are in place and what choices they have about it. There should also be a commitment to working out in the open as all of these changes are implemented.

The strategy makes strong commitments in these areas. I was pleased to see pledges to make it clearer to people how and why data is being used, including the provision of information about the benefits and risks of use, the safeguards in place, and how people can opt out of sharing for purposes beyond than their own care if they choose. The plan for rebuilding public trust will be a pivotal deliverable that I am keen to get into the detail of. I have also been asked to feed into work on the data pact, which the strategy says will 바카라 사이트set out how we will use health and care data and what the public has the right to expect바카라 사이트. As a product that will set the scene for the public in terms of their data, we need to get this right.

Establishing and demonstrating public benefit

Taking us to the next level is how a system ensures, evaluates, and demonstrates, the public benefit from data use. Society바카라 사이트s familiarity with the beneficial uses of data has improved thanks to its prevalence in conversations around the pandemic. However, this does not mean that an enduring trust can be presumed which grants a social licence for all future uses of data collected in providing care for other purposes that may benefit the public. Trust is context and use-case specific. The likely public benefit of any new data use needs to be established. This must include demonstrating credible, authentic engagement with potential risks and their mitigations, as well as the exciting opportunities from data use.

When it comes to public benefit, transparency remains key. There must be clarity about the role of third-party data access, including by profit-making commercial companies. The strategy speaks simply of 바카라 사이트innovators바카라 사이트 which masks the complexity; it is important to be clear about who may benefit from any data use in addition to the public, whether that is a commercial company or an academic institution 바카라 사이트 and also why that may be necessary and justifiable. The system must be straight about the 바카라 사이트who바카라 사이트 if it is to develop the maturity for more complex discussions about 바카라 사이트how, when, what and why바카라 사이트 of fair data partnerships.

Also of note here is the reference in the strategy to the work on a value-sharing framework to support good data partnerships. I hope to see this framework evolve in a way that will support better conversations with the public about the value of data and what 바카라 사이트fair바카라 사이트 terms for the NHS might look like in practice.

Ensuring appropriate mechanisms for choice

As public sector organisations and systems evolve and become more complex, with increasing ambitions to deliver public good, the rights, agency, and experiences of individuals 바카라 사이트 both the professionals within it and the public it serves 바카라 사이트 can get lost as the system strives to 바카라 사이트deliver바카라 사이트. In this context, actively maintaining individual choice regarding how data about them is used is an important ethical safeguard.

It was reassuring, therefore, to see opt-out, which was absent from the draft strategy, now included in it. I am looking forward to hearing more about, and getting involved in, the plans for ensuring that the opt-out landscape is simplified. Opt-out choices need to be clear, coherent, simple to action and 바카라 사이트 perhaps most importantly 바카라 사이트 authentic: we need to ensure that they are doing what people expect them to do. There is work to be done with the public to navigate the tension between providing for the common good (through more efficient and safe individual care, planning, research, and innovation) and establishing what people should have a right to determine for themselves regarding when and how their confidential data is used.

Sharing power with the public

Finally, I바카라 사이트d propose for any organisation or system to reach full maturity it needs to develop the capacity to be self-reflective about how power is exercised and experienced, both by those working within it and receiving its services. I was very struck by the repeated use of the word power in the data strategy. But what does a mature exercise of power look like? It is demonstrated by a system confident enough to genuinely engage, listen and respond to what it hears, and strong enough to think how power can be meaningfully shared. This has to involve independent scrutiny and challenge, and public involvement in decision-making.

I was therefore pleased to see the strategy commit to undertaking in-depth public engagement, including working with seldom-heard groups, to consider policy questions such as the delivery of SDEs and the future of opt-outs. I was also delighted to see the commitment to a statutory safe haven for health and care data in NHS England, where data access decisions will be subject to independent scrutiny, as well as the commitment to the sharing of decision-making power with the public in the strategy바카라 사이트s draft guidelines for SDEs: 바카라 사이트secure data environments must ensure that patients and the public are actively involved in the decision-making processes to build trust in how their data is used바카라 사이트.

These are good examples of how systems can improve and strengthen trust by being open to challenge. There is much that can be learned here from the experience and expertise within existing independent bodies such as the Independent Group Advising on the Release of Data (IGARD) and the Confidentiality Advisory Group (CAG). If delivered well, these commitments will demonstrate system maturity in action: transforming words around power to meaningful deeds.

Some final thoughts

Some of the strategy바카라 사이트s commitments have very ambitious delivery timescales, which I hope are achievable. As the strategy now transitions into delivery, much detail still needs to be worked through around many of the commitments. This includes the sizeable pledge to engage with the public to build trust. It is important to move at pace where this is practical and achievable, but some things will take time to get right, and I think working with the public, and working out how best to involve and engage them, is one of those things. Equally, determining the nature and intent of any legislative changes concerning identifiable data will also be critical.

This is an exciting time to be NDG. My panel and I are hopeful for the future as outlined in the strategy, and we look forward to supporting all those working hard to improve health, care and treatment experience and outcomes through better use of one of our most valuable national assets: our health and care data.

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Published 27 June 2022