Patient Record Data: Statistical Disclosure Control for Grid Based Data Access
M. Elliot, K. Purdam, D. Smith
Cathie Marsh Centre, University of Manchester
Mark.J.Elliot@manchester.ac.uk
Patient record data is potentially highly sensitive and its secondary use raises both ethical and data protection issues. Disclosure of patient data could cause serious difficulties for the medical profession and be potentially damaging for individual patients and clinicians. Yet at the same time patient records are a hugely valuable resource in terms of clinical research and patient treatment. A secure, remote access system for such data would provide numerous benefits. In this paper we outline the statistical disclosure risks posed by patient record data in the context of the establishment of a grid based medical data repository. We review good practice in existing patient databases, outline a scenario model for assessing risk and suggest a new model for statistical disclosure control of patient data. The findings are likely not only to be of interest to health researchers and practitioners, but also to serve as an exemplar to the development of e-research for grid developers and users across different data types and policy areas.
