EU Health Data Space to support patients and research
Press
Releases
·
Citizens will be able to access prescriptions, imagery
and lab tests electronically, also from different EU countries
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Aggregated health data can be shared for research
purposes e.g. into cancer and rare diseases
·
Strong privacy safeguards on the manner and the
purpose of the sharing of sensitive data
EP and Council negotiators agreed on the
creation of a European Health Data Space to ease access to personal health data
and to boost secure sharing for the public interest.
The provisional political agreement on a
European Health Data Space (EHDS), reached early on Friday by Parliament and
the Belgian Presidency of the Council, outlines that patients will be able to
access their personal health data electronically across the EU’s different
healthcare systems. The bill also gives health professionals access to their
patients’ data, based strictly on what is necessary for a given treatment, and
patients will also be able to download their health record free of charge.
Electronic health records (EHR) would include
patient summaries, electronic prescriptions, medical imagery and laboratory
results (so-called primary use).
Each country would establish national health
data access services based on the MyHealth@EU platform. The law would also create a
European electronic health record exchange format, and outline rules on data
quality, security and the interoperability of EHR systems that will be
monitored by national market surveillance authorities.
Data-sharing for the common good with safeguards
The EHDS would allow anonymised or pseudonymised
health data, including health records, clinical trials, pathogens, health
claims and reimbursements, genetic data, public health registry information,
wellness data and information on healthcare resources, expenditure and
financing, to be shared for public interest purposes (so-called secondary use).
These reasons would include research, innovation, policy-making, education and
patient safety purposes.
The sharing of data for advertising or assessing
insurance requests will be prohibited. During negotiations, MEPs ensured that
secondary use would not be allowed concerning decisions on labour markets
(including job offers), lending conditions and other types of discrimination or
profiling.
Stronger safeguards for sensitive data
The law ensures patients will have a say in how
their data is used and accessed. They must be informed each time their data is
accessed, and they will have the right to request or correct incorrect data.
Patients will also be able to object to healthcare professionals accessing
their data for primary use, except where this is necessary for protecting the
vital interests of the data subject or another person. MEPs secured the right
for patients to opt out of secondary use, with certain exceptions for public-interest,
policy-making or statistics purposes, and protections for intellectual property
rights and trade secrets when relevant data is shared for secondary use.
National data protection authorities will
monitor the enforcement of health data access rights and will be empowered to
issue fines in the event of shortcomings.
Quotes
Tomislav
Sokol (EPP,
Croatia), Environment Committee co-rapporteur, said: “The European Health Data
Space will put citizens in control of their health data by providing a safe
framework for storing and accessing their personal health records that will be
accessible anywhere in the EU - enhancing healthcare at a national and
cross-border level. the EHDS will also facilitate the responsible sharing of
health data to researchers - boosting research and innovation in the EU, and
ensuring the development of new treatments.”
Annalisa
Tardino (ID,
Italy), Civil Liberties Committee co-rapporteur, said: “The EHDS will
contribute to providing state-of-the-art healthcare to patients everywhere in
the EU. We have succeeded in including in the text significant reinforcements
regarding the protection of sensitive personal data, in particular with the
possibility for patients to opt-out both for primary and secondary use of their
health data. In that regard, Parliament’s mandate was stronger and provided
even more safeguards, but the majority of LIBE political groups considers that
the final agreement strikes a balance between exchanging health data for
treatment and for life-saving research, and protecting the privacy of our
citizens.”
Next steps
The provisional agreement still needs to be
formally adopted by both institutions before it can enter into law.
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