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Sharing of patient data didn’t breach rules, says public health agency

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Public Health England has criticised media reports that it handed over the medical records of thousands of patients with cancer to a firm working for the tobacco multinational Philip Morris… Click to show full abstract

Public Health England has criticised media reports that it handed over the medical records of thousands of patients with cancer to a firm working for the tobacco multinational Philip Morris International, saying that newspapers had presented a “very distorted view of the facts.” The Telegraph reported on 14 January that anonymised data covering 179 040 lung tumours diagnosed between 2009 and 2013 in England were given to William E Wecker Associates without the consent of any of the patients concerned or their families.1 The company has testified on behalf of tobacco companies in dozens of lawsuits. The report was then picked up by other newspapers, including the Daily Mail , Sun , Independent , and Daily Express . Public Health England said that any data were completely anonymised and that its action was fully in line with guidance …

Keywords: patient data; health; sharing patient; breach rules; public health; data breach

Journal Title: British Medical Journal
Year Published: 2018

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