As usual in such cases, paranoia and hysteria are not unknown.
I'm not trying to scaremonger, and I don't use Facebook etc. I was sent this by by cousin, who is a surgeon and thinks it is a terrible idea to allow access to commercial entities.
My NSC duty is simply saying 'if you are not happy with your medical records being included and potentially shared with third-parties, you might want to opt out'. For those of us that aren't bothered, then we can simply ignore it.
So if I complete the form to opt out, hand it into my surgery, how will I know they have acted on it and not just thrown it in the bin. I will not be able to provide any proof I requested the opt-out
Our politicians and press are largely technically illiterate. There is very little chance that we will have a grown up debate about the ethics and potential benefits of applying machine learning and artificial intelligence to medical records.
This is the real prize here and it has the potential to benefit so many people. Once you understand the basic principles, it really isn't that scary and ironically it relies on the data being anonymised in order to ensure that there is no unintentional bias introduced.
Swings several ways Shirley, data pooled medical research for the greater good is great, but profit driven corporations don't work like that.
Swings several ways Shirley, data pooled medical research for the greater good is great, but profit driven corporations don't work like that.
If only it were, from the NHS website
We are not going to sell your data
NHS Digital does not sell data. It does however charge those who want to access its data for the costs of making the data available to them. This is because we are not funded centrally to do this. Charges only cover the cost of running the service and means that those organisations who need access to the data bear the costs of this, rather than NHS Digital.
The data will only be used for health and care planning and research purposes by organisations who have a legal basis and legitimate need to use the data. We do not allow data to be used solely for commercial purposes.
https://digital.nhs.uk/data-and-information/data-collections-and-data-sets/data-collections/general-practice-data-for-planning-and-research/advice-for-the-public
Our politicians and press are largely technically illiterate. There is very little chance that we will have a grown up debate about the ethics and potential benefits of applying machine learning and artificial intelligence to medical records.
This is the real prize here and it has the potential to benefit so many people. Once you understand the basic principles, it really isn't that scary and ironically it relies on the data being anonymised in order to ensure that there is no unintentional bias introduced.
you mean like the same corporations that research and produce the Covid vaccine? or how about every treatment you receive?
the companies using the data dont care about you they are interested in the illness and disease, response to treatments. the pseudonymisation and security processes are very robust, and strictly implemented. usually beyond what is necessary. in some cases they'll want to track a group more closely for research, using processes that already happen.
I agree. But you don't really need GP records for any of that do you. And you certainly don't need to know the individuals.
In practise, none of us know what this actually means. An insurance company could argue they have a legal and legitimate need to use the data for health and care planning. It's such a loose vague decrption, it is very open to being abused.
The very first line is a contradictory. "We don't sell your data" but we do make it available to those who wish to access the data (but only charge them what it costs to deliver it.) The argument isn't about profiteering, its about access.
I agree. But you don't really need GP records for any of that do you. And you certainly don't need to know the individuals.