Patient data ownership: who owns your health?
Patient data ownership: who owns your health?
This article answers two questions from the perspective of United Kingdom law and policy: (i) is health information property? and (ii) should it be? We argue that special features of health information make it unsuitable for conferral of property rights without an extensive system of data-specific rules, like those that govern intellectual property. Additionally, we argue that even if an extensive set of rules were developed, the advantages of a property framework to govern health information would be slight: propertization is unlikely to enhance patient self-determination, increase market efficiency, provide patients a foothold in the data economy, clarify legal uses of information, or encourage data-driven innovation. The better approach is to rely less, not more, on property. We recommend a regulatory model with four signature features: (i) substantial protection for personal health data similar to the GDPR with transparent limits on how, when, and by whom patient data can be accessed, used, and transmitted; (ii) input from relevant stakeholders; (iii) interoperability; and (iv) greater research into a health-data service, rather than goods, model.
Consent, Digital health, Health, Information and data, Ownership, Property
Liddell, Kathleen
45c7fd9b-ff15-4dd8-a059-28b8426cb361
Simon, David A.
6232c9e6-1670-43e6-9c43-185a00037504
Lucassen, Anneke
2eb85efc-c6e8-4c3f-b963-0290f6c038a5
1 October 2021
Liddell, Kathleen
45c7fd9b-ff15-4dd8-a059-28b8426cb361
Simon, David A.
6232c9e6-1670-43e6-9c43-185a00037504
Lucassen, Anneke
2eb85efc-c6e8-4c3f-b963-0290f6c038a5
Liddell, Kathleen, Simon, David A. and Lucassen, Anneke
(2021)
Patient data ownership: who owns your health?
Journal of Law and the Biosciences, 8 (2), [lsab023].
(doi:10.1093/jlb/lsab023).
Abstract
This article answers two questions from the perspective of United Kingdom law and policy: (i) is health information property? and (ii) should it be? We argue that special features of health information make it unsuitable for conferral of property rights without an extensive system of data-specific rules, like those that govern intellectual property. Additionally, we argue that even if an extensive set of rules were developed, the advantages of a property framework to govern health information would be slight: propertization is unlikely to enhance patient self-determination, increase market efficiency, provide patients a foothold in the data economy, clarify legal uses of information, or encourage data-driven innovation. The better approach is to rely less, not more, on property. We recommend a regulatory model with four signature features: (i) substantial protection for personal health data similar to the GDPR with transparent limits on how, when, and by whom patient data can be accessed, used, and transmitted; (ii) input from relevant stakeholders; (iii) interoperability; and (iv) greater research into a health-data service, rather than goods, model.
Text
lsab023
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Accepted/In Press date: 5 April 2021
Published date: 1 October 2021
Additional Information:
Funding Information:
Kathleen Liddell gratefully acknowledges the support by the Novo Nordisk Foundation for the scientifically independent Collaborative Research Program for Biomedical Innovation Law (grant NNF17SA0027784) and the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation (Grant Agreement Number 9974). David A. Simon gratefully acknowledges the financial support from the Academy of Finland research project, Fairness, Morality, and Equality in international and European Intellectual Property Law (FAME-IP). All authors gratefully acknowledge support from the NIHR Southampton Biomedical Research Centre.
Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2021.
Copyright:
Copyright 2021 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
Keywords:
Consent, Digital health, Health, Information and data, Ownership, Property
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 453869
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/453869
PURE UUID: 55b4c6ba-e8c0-4e0c-a904-4cdd9006a2b2
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Date deposited: 25 Jan 2022 17:41
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 02:54
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Author:
Kathleen Liddell
Author:
David A. Simon
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