Maintaining public trust in use of Big Data for enhancing human health
In an article published this month in The Lancet Oncology, a collaborative team of international researchers led by Queen’s University Belfast, outlines the imperative for maintaining public trust in the use of health data for research.
The article follows recent discussions in the mainstream media about data privacy, in the wake of the Facebook/Cambridge Analytica scandal. Led by Mark Lawler, Chair in Translational Cancer Genomics at Queen’s University and Associate Director at Health Data Research UK, and an active member of the Global Alliance for Genomics and Health (GA4GH), the authors urge the health science community to talk more openly about using personal health data in research to enhance human health and eradicate diseases such as cancer.
In the article, which is the Editors Choice for the August issue of Lancet Oncology, the authors cite several national and international initiatives – including The Global Alliance for Genomics and Health (GA4GH) and the UK’s 100,000 Genomes Project – that depend upon comprehensive data analytics to drive evidence-based solutions to improve health outcomes.
Professor Lawler said: “Personal health data is an extremely valuable commodity for research and improving cancer care and should only ever be used in a responsible, ethical and secure way that is in the interest of society. Transparency on why and how we use data is vital if we are to maintain the social licence for data-driven research.”
Approaches to build public trust and restore confidence in use of health data are outlined in the article, entitled: A Roadmap for restoring trust in Big Data. These include:
· Putting citizens at the heart of decision making; communicating openly about what happens to data, who is using it, and what level of control people can, or cannot, expect;
· Applying ethical rigour every time data is used, shared or transferred to safeguard individual privacy, and;
· Ensuring data is secure and provide guarantees that data will not be compromised by breaches that reveal personal information.
Anna Middleton, Head of the Society and Ethics Research Group, Connecting Science at the Wellcome Genome Campus in Cambridge, UK and a co-author of the study said: “Public trust in data science is essential for large scale initiatives like these to deliver on their promise to enable significant breakthroughs in our understanding of human disease."
Middleton also chairs the GA4GH Participant Values Task Team, which is leading a project to gather public attitudes towards genomic data sharing via the online survey, Your DNA, Your Say.
Professor Bartha Maria Knoppers, Director of the Center for Genomics and Policy at McGill University, co-chair of the GA4GH Regulatory and Ethics Work Stream, and co-author on the paper commented: “While public confidence in data security and integrity has recently come under scrutiny, this did not include the field of health data. It is important to emphasise the benefits of international data sharing and underscore the responsible frameworks put in place by scientists themselves to guard against possible misuse.”
Examples of existing frameworks and initiatives that are supporting the research community in its use of health data are highlighted. One of these is the GA4GH Framework for Responsible Sharing of Genomic and Health-related Data which contains foundational principles and core elements for responsible data sharing and is guided by human rights, including the right to benefit from the progress of science, as well as privacy, non-discrimination, and procedural fairness.
Health Data Research UK, which was also involved in the article, develops and applies cutting-edge data science approaches to clinical, biomedical and other multi-dimensional data to address the most pressing health challenges facing the public. Prof Lawler highlighted that ensuring safe principles for data “ safe people, working on safe data, in safe places, with safe outputs” will help establish a robust research and governance infrastructure that is necessary for the analysis of big data and, importantly, to secure trust.
Other initiatives indicated in the article include Understanding Patient Data, an independent patient data task-force that is enabling better conversations about the uses of health information through its work with patients, charities, and healthcare.
Commenting on the article, Prof Ian Young, Chief Scientific Advisor for the Northern Ireland Department of Health and Head of the Research and Development Division of the Public Health Agency said. “It is essential that we use data effectively but responsibly in order to improve the health of the citizens of Northern Ireland. The PHA is committed to facilitating the safe use of data in research and its ability to enhance human health.”
Professor Lawler concludes: “Public confidence in how data is used has been significantly compromised in recent months. It is incumbent on all of us to advocate the value of health data research to society and to promote the need for robust, trustworthy and ethical approaches to deliver new health advances for our citizens. Big Data can save lives, but we must use it effectively and responsibly for the benefit of citizens ”
Professor Mark Lawler
Media
Media inquiries to Sian Devlin at Queen’s University Communications Office T; +44 (0)28 9097 5840 E: s.devlin@qub.ac.uk.