Anonymisation Standard for Publishing Health and Social Care Data
Summary
- Secretary of State (Department of Health)
- The NHS Commissioning Board
- Public bodies publishing information about provision of health/adult social care
- Information codes of practice
- Information governance
- Community health
- Dentistry
- Hospital
- Maternity
- Mental health
- Pharmacy
- Transport / Infrastructure
- Urgent and Emergency Care
Documentation
The law pulls in two opposite directions. Human Rights and Data Protection legislation, along with our domestic common law duty to respect confidentiality, require us to protect information that could identify an individual. The Freedom of Information Act requires public authorities to release information about their activities, and this message is reinforced by the government’s transparency agenda. Although the law makes a clear distinction between identifying and nonidentifying data, where that line should be drawn may be far from clear in practice. That is why this anonymisation standard for publishing health and social care data is needed. This process standard provides an agreed and standardised approach, grounded in the law, enabling organisations to:
- Distinguish between identifying and non-identifying information
- Deploy a standard approach and a set of standard tools to anonymise information to ensure that, as far as it is reasonably practicable to do so, information published does not identify individuals.