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National data guardian
National data guardian













By Sophia Waterfield Securing the UK public sector in the era of hybrid workingĭelegates at a recent Tech Monitor roundtable shared their experience of securing hybrid working. The cloud provider has received millions in public funds, but critics say it doesn't pay enough tax. Health data privacy campaign group medConfidential says 'anonymised' data held by Sensyne Health could be re-identified By Sophia Waterfield AWS handed £600m in UK public sector contracts as its tax affairs are questioned NHS Trusts advised to cut ties with clinical data platform Sensyne Health Long-standing site providing news and analysis on digital transformation in the UK public sector becomes part of Tech Monitor. By Claudia Glover Government Computing joins Tech Monitor stable

national data guardian

By Sophia Waterfield Law enforcement is ‘failing to protect governments against ransomware’Īuthorities are failing to protect the public sector from growing tide of ransomware, says former UK security adviser. Public sector bosses must have a "basic understanding" of digital technology, according to new CDDO guidelines. The panel looked at why access to data is important and whether the pandemic has permanently changed the country’s relationship with data.Senior civil servants told to get to grips with AI and cloud computing The power of data in a pandemic was the subject of an episode of the Unplugged podcast. “By doing this openly and transparently, we can build on what we are seeing about the readiness for people to allow their data to be used in ways that benefit themselves, their families and others both now and in the future.” As we move into the next phase, it will be important to examine which of these needs to continue and what needs changing. Seven in ten people (70%) said data sharing rules should return to what they were before, with 60% agreeing that after the pandemic organisations such as local authorities, university and hospital researchers, and private companies should be allowed to carry on using health and care data to improve care for all people, not just coronavirus patients.ĭame Caldicott added: “In the first few months of the pandemic, I was pleased to see emergency measures put into place to ensure data could be used when and where it was needed. Appropriate safeguards must be in place to protect confidentiality and data security.”Īs well as questions on information sharing during an emergency, respondents were also asked about post-Covid. It is essential that clear reasons and explanations are given to the public if their data is to be used. “This is encouraging but we should remember that trust is hard-won and easily lost. People have been able to see the immediate relevance and need for data to be used. “During the pandemic we have seen members of the public taking a more active part in discussions that were formerly the domain of experts – such as how data can be used to track disease spread, show us who is most at risk and reveal what treatment is effective.

national data guardian

However, 71% said they would like to know more about how information about them can be used to tackle the coronavirus pandemic.ĭame Fiona Caldicott, the National Data Guardian, said: “By building people’s understanding about how their health and care data can be used safely and appropriately for their own individual benefit and for the wider public good, we build public trust for the use of that data. Furthermore, around eight in ten people (78%) agreed that during a public health emergency such as coronavirus, it is more important than usual that health and care data is shared with all involved in the emergency response.

national data guardian

Nearly two thirds (63%) of the 2,114 respondents said the pandemic has made them more accepting of the need for sharing health and care data. A poll carried out by the National Data Guardian for Health and Social Care (NDG) has shown a growing public understanding that data is vital for tackling the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic.















National data guardian