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A medical trial involving the NHS and Google's DeepMind violated UK privacy law

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A UK watchdog has ruled that a trust of the National Health Service violated privacy law when it provided the details of 1.6 million patients to Google’s DeepMind in a medical trial last year.
The UK’s Information Commission (ICO) has ruled that a London hospital failed to comply with data protection laws when it issued patient information to Google’s DeepMind as part of a medical trial last year.
A report issued by the ICO details how the Royal Free hospital in Hampstead, London provided the details of more than a million patients to DeepMind, a British artificial intelligence company that was acquired by Google in 2014.
The trial involved the development of an app called Streams, which helped doctors and medical staff to identify when a patient was at risk of developing acute kidney injury (AKI) . Throughout the course of the trial, the Royal Free NHS Foundation Trust provided information on 1.6 million patients to DeepMind.
An investigation by the ICO revealed «several shortcomings» on the handling of the data, and the ICO further stated that patients were not «adequately informed» on how their data was to be used- a violation of the UK’s Data Protection Act.
Elizabeth Denham, the information commissioner, stated the following:
As a result of the investigation, the Royal Free NHS Trust has signed an undertaking to «commit to making changes» to address shortcomings with how the data was handled. The terms of the undertaking can be viewed in the report issued by the ICO.
Source: The ICO via BBC News | Image via CIO

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