ID | 187179 |
Title Proper | Erosion of health data privacy |
Language | ENG |
Author | Ebeling, Mary F E |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | The COVID-19 pandemic has presented lessons on using health data to improve, save, and protect lives, and the need to improve the stewardship of health privacy. Before the pandemic, the United States already had a broken health data system, fragmented and dominated by public-private partnerships in which the businesses involved sought to commercialize patient data. More than two years into the pandemic, in many respects health data privacy is even more fractured and prone to being misused to profiteer and to harm rather than help the most vulnerable. Health data is now being used by law enforcement to criminalize abortion and undocumented immigration, making reform an urgent necessity. |
`In' analytical Note | Current History Vol. 121, No.838; Nov 2022: p.316–321 |
Journal Source | Current History Vol: 121 No 838 |
Key Words | Immigration ; Health Care ; Data ; Abortion ; Pandemic ; Privacy ; COVID-19 |