Bloomberg’s BNA News reported on the 17th Annual Security and Privacy Conference in Victoria, BC. “Clinicians and privacy officers shouldn’t fear but embrace disruptive technologies to enhance privacy and improve patient care,” they report, quoting the panel.
With privacy in mind, Privacy Analytics CEO Khaled El Emam, said to create better health outcomes for individuals and patients in general, there needs to be an integration of de-identified datasets. He cited CancerLinQ as an example of such an endeavor. Risk-based de-identification opens health data to a new world of possibility while protecting patient privacy.
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