Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Data-mining: Australia Just Calls It Something Else

In Australia, the data mining industry pays doctors to sell patients' prescription records. In the US they pay pharmacies, hospitals, and PBMs. See Article.

A complaint to the Australian Privacy Commissioner was dismissed because the data miners claimed that patients and doctors were "de-identified". But it is very difficult to fully de-identify personal health data so that re-identification is impossible. If true, the industry should have offered proof that their methods actually work and that the data cannot be re-identified.

As in the US, the theft and sale of personal prescription records is rationalized with claims that it can be used to "provide valuable insight into healthcare trends-- including the spread of infectious diseases". The word that describes using data to provide "valuable insights" is "research". It happens to be both illegal and unethical to do research without informed consent.

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