1887

Health Data Governance

Privacy, Monitoring and Research

image of Health Data Governance

All countries are investing in health data. There are however significant cross-country differences in data availability and use. Some countries stand out for their innovative practices enabling privacy-protective data use while others are falling behind with insufficient data and restrictions that limit access to and use of data, even by government itself. Countries that develop a data governance framework that enables privacy-protective data use will not only have the information needed to promote quality, efficiency and performance in their health systems, they will become a more attractive centre for medical research. After examining the current situation in OECD countries, a multi-disciplinary advisory panel of experts identified eight key data governance mechanisms to maximise benefits to patients and to societies from the collection, linkage and analysis of health data and to, at the same time, minimise risks to the privacy of patients and to the security of health data. These mechanisms include coordinated development of high-value, privacy-protective health information systems, legislation that permits privacy-protective data use, open and transparent public communication, accreditation or certification of health data processors, transparent and fair project approval processes, data de-identification and data security practices that meet legal requirements and public expectations without compromising data utility and a process to continually assess and renew the data governance framework as new data and new risks emerge.

English

Executive summary

OECD countries are ageing and increasing shares of our populations are living longer with multiple chronic and disabling conditions. This shift is placing pressure on limited health care resources. To meet this challenge, health system managers and policy makers are moving toward performance-based governance to improve care quality, co-ordination and efficiency. Performance-based governance requires timely and accurate patient data that span the continuum of care, including health outcomes and costs. Such data also support re-designing and evaluating new models of health care service delivery and contribute to the discovery and evaluation of new treatments.

English

This is a required field
Please enter a valid email address
Approval was a Success
Invalid data
An Error Occurred
Approval was partially successful, following selected items could not be processed due to error