UK government releases NHS covid-19 data sharing agreements

Following significant pressure from groups such as OpenDemocracy and Foxglove the UK government has released its data sharing contracts with companies such as Amazon, Google and Microsoft for the creation of a cloud database for sharing covid-19 related data. Contracts with AI firms Planatir and Faculty were also released.

This promotes transparency and accountability around efforts to establish contract tracing technology and centralised databases to combat covid-19. The potential access to high volumes of healthcare data via these databases merits high levels of scrutiny under privacy and data protection laws. However, groups such as openDemocracy raised concerns around sharing high volumes of NHS data and the risk posed by significant third party exposure. In particular, it criticized the credibility of AI firms Planatir and Faculty.

In a recent press release from openDemocracy the contracts were made public:

View Google NHS agreements (PDF, 0.7 MB)

View Faculty NHS agreements (PDF, 0.9 MB)

View Palantir NHS agreements (PDF, 11.6 MB)

View Microsoft NHS agreements (PDF, 1.5 MB)

NHS England has also released the Data Protection Impact Assessment which was undertaken prior to forming a centralised data storage facility for covid-19 related data. This database holds data ranging from regional infection maps to 911 call data and bed capacities.

The NHS uses a ‘cloud first’ approach to ensuring that data is leveraged most effectively. All data is collated in a cloud database allowing for security and accessibility.

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