Citizens’ juries find patients willing to share data
- 27 April 2017

Patients are willing to share their health data providing there is a direct public benefit, according to the citizens’ juries of a multi-million pound government project.
Connected Health Cities (CHC) is a Ā£20 million scheme, set up by former chancellor George Osborne, which aims to link data sets to researchers across the north of England.
Funded from January 2016 for three years, part of CHC involves setting up citizen juries to understand public opinion on data sharing.
Citizens’ juries are a form of participatory decision making, with a high-profile example being the citizen assembly in Ireland.
During the Health for Informatics conference held in Manchester earlier this week, Mary Tully, CHCās director of public engagement, told Digital Health News āpeople were willing to accept uses of data with all the obvious governance caveats that it would be protected, providing they could see that it was being done for public benefitā.
There were two CHC citizens’ juries, made up of 18 people each, who were paid for giving up four days of their time to hear experts and have discussions. Individuals were selected to match the demographic make up of each area.
Tully said as a direct consequence of the citizens’ juries, CHC will now set up an independent advisory panel and change the way CHC explains its work to the public.
āIt showed us the importance of understanding what people really understood about how the NHS ran before starting to explain to them how we are going to change things.ā
Patientsā sensitivity to health data use was demonstrated through the controversial care.data project.
Begun in 2012 as a plan to link health data sets to academics, care.data ran into problems over what the data could be used for and how patients could opt out.
These concerns were exacerbated when NHS England ran an ill-judged public information campaignĀ in January 2014.
While care.data officially closed last year, the concept however lives on through the proposed new regional ādata lakeā initiative that Digital Health News reported on in January.
The long shadow of care.data was also demonstrated through the TPP sharing furore, when in March the Information Commissionerās Office raised ādata protection compliance concernsā about TPPās SystmOne.
Tully said that the citizens’ juries were not a reaction to the care.data controversy: ā[Theyāre] not a response to care.data as such, weāre doing what we consider to be the right thing to doā.
āThe right thing to do is to engage with the public.ā
John Ainsworth, CHC director, said at the Health for Informatics conference, said āeverything we do in CHC, we try to learn the lessons of care.data, and actually do it in a way that brings the public population with usā.
At the event in Manchester, CHC presented a prototype of a patient consent model that used blockchain technology, and would sit behind a patient portal.
Ainsworth said that āblockchain is a great solution for transparency because youāre able record a complete audit trailā for how the data is used.
The prototype could remove the need for mediation from a trusted third party, he said, along with giving patients explicit control of their data.
CHC is split across four regions in the north, with each geographical area focusing on improving data flows in two clinical pathways.
Niels Peek, Greater Manchester CHC director, and said one of his projects is the creation of the Datawell initiative
Datawell is building infrastructure for data sharing across different health and care providers in Great Manchester, currently being rolled out across four trusts and two clinical commissioning groups in the area.
Peek also said he will be trialling a āsafe havenā project where data can be analysed in a secure environment, and it cannot leave the facility, which would be a āstep changeā.
āThereās no risk that the data would proliferate and sit on USBsā, Peek said. āThatās a situation you do not want.ā
5 Comments
but what about the nhs, are they willing and committed, at a national level, to share the data with the citizens who own it ? anyone who is employed by the nhs (e.g simon stevens), please respond, as citizens are listening, or is nhs comms just one way? (that’s called a dictatorship)
Interesting that anyone accepts the conclusions of 2 groups of 18 individual subjected to 4 days of “briefing from experts and discussions” as representing general agreement that *all* patients are willing to share their health data with researchers (undefined) for unknown – even if “worthy” – purposes.
Isn’t *individual consent* needed – with “fair processing” information from the Data Controllers?
The article specifically states this is to link individual data to researchers – i.e.this is not direct care but secondary uses: ethics & DPA apply
please see my comment, push the pressure up 2WARDS the national leadership, away from the front line
The concept of consent as the legitimising condition for processing health -care data needs to be carefully re-examined with the imminent enactment of the EU General Data Protection Regulation in May 2018.
First, under article 9.2 the GDPR offers other conditions including those specifically for heath-care (h) and Public Health, the Public Interest, and any other UK statutory gateway such as the Care Act.
Secondly the far more rigorous privacy rights given to data subjects will make any form of “explicit consent” very onerous to apply
I await the conclusions of the Caldicott 3 review and how the historic culture of consent based processing in health-care will be squared with the GDPR in 2018.
” used blockchain technology, and would sit behind a patient portal.
Ainsworth said that āblockchain is a great solution for transparency because youāre able record a complete audit trailā for how the data is used.”
This might mitigate risk, but only if the patient can access the audit trail directly.
Comments are closed.