
The Patient, Data Protection and Changing Healthcare Models, 12
The Impact of E-Health on Informed Consent, Anonymisation and Purpose Limitation
Griet Verhenneman(Author)
Intersentia Ltd (Publisher)
1st Edition
Published on 31. March 2021
Book
Hardback
405 pages
978-1-83970-124-5 (ISBN)
Description
Healthcare is changing. It is moving to a paperless environment and becoming a team-based, interdisciplinary and patient-centred profession. Modern healthcare models reflect our data-driven economy, and adopt value-driven strategies, evidence-based medicine, new technology, decision support and automated decision-making.Amidst these changes are the patients, and their right to data protection, privacy and autonomy.The question arises of how to match phenomena that characterise the predominant ethos in modern healthcare systems, such as e-health and personalised medicine, to patient autonomy and data protection laws. That matching exercise is essential. The successful adoption of ICT in healthcare depends, at least partly, on how the public's concerns about data protection and confidentiality are addressed.Three backbone principles of European data protection law are considered to be bottlenecks for the implementation of modern healthcare systems: informed consent, anonymisation and purpose limitation. This book assesses the adequacy of these principles and considers them in the context of technological and societal evolutions. A must-read for every professional active in the field of data protection law, health law, policy development or IT-driven innovation.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Cambridge
United Kingdom
Dimensions
Height: 240 mm
Width: 160 mm
Weight
800 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-83970-124-5 (9781839701245)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Content
Introduction (p. 1) PART 1. CHANGING HEALTHCARE SYSTEMS. Chapter I. Societal and Technological Changes (p. 7) Chapter II. Personalised Healthcare (p. 39) PART 2. THE PATIENT'S RIGHT TO DATA PROTECTION. UNDERSTANDING THE LEGAL CONTEXT. Chapter I. Understanding the Legal Roots (p. 45) Chapter II. Understanding the Concepts (p. 87) Chapter III. Understanding the Subject of Protection (p. 97) Interim Conclusions (p. 123) PART 3. PROTECTIVE AND EMPOWERING MECHANISMS IN EUROPEAN. AN ASSESSMENT OF INFORMED CONSENT, ANONYMISATION AND PURPOSE LIMITATION. Chapter I. Informed Consent, a Means to Empower the Patient? (p. 127) Chapter II. The Obligation for Data Minimisation through Anonymisation (p. 207) Chapter III. Protecting the Patient through Purpose Limitation (p. 241) PART 4. CONCLUDING REMARKS AND RECOMMENDATIONS FOR THE FUTURE. Concluding Remarks and Recommendations for the Future (p. 339) List of abbreviations (p. 365) Bibliography (p. 369)