Amazon has been granted access to NHS data under the terms of a contract with the Department of Health and Social Care ( Getty )
NHS data on the health of the population is being handed over to Amazon at no charge under a controversial deal between the US giant and the Department of Health and Social Care.
While individual patient data is not being given to the company, a copy of the December 2018 contract between Amazon and the DHSC reveals the company will be able to profit from its access to a range of NHS information.
Health secretary Matt Hancock hailed the deal with Amazon in July as a way to help give patients better medical advice using technology such as Alexa, which uses Amazon’s algorithm to answer key question.
Campaigners from Privacy International obtained a copy of the contract using freedom of information laws. The full contract reveals the deal goes far beyond medical advice for use by Alexa.
It states the company will be able to access all “healthcare information, including without limitation symptoms, causes, and definitions, and all related copyrightable content, data, information and other materials”, the DHSC has.
The contract allows Amazon to use this data in a number of ways – not just providing advice to UK users.
UK news in pictures
It also blocks the DHSC from issuing any publicity without Amazon’s consent, saying it “may not issue a press release or any other publicity in connection with or related to this agreement or Amazon’s use of [DHSC] content without the prior written consent of Amazon”.
Large parts of the contract have been redacted, with the DHSC claiming the blacked-out sections relate to commercial sensitivity for the company that could be damaged if the specific elements it agreed to with the government became known.
In a report on the contract, Privacy International said: “While this particular contract may sound harmless at first – after all, it is good news if Amazon uses the NHS as a trusted source for information for medical queries – we should not be naive about the intentions of big companies that are preying over the NHS.
“This particular partnership also raises questions when it comes to competition regulation of dominant players in the digital era.
“With their business model relying increasingly on the availability of consumers’ data, dominant online platforms can engage in various forms of data exploitation or even impose unfair terms for consumers.”
drug companies want to increase the costs of medicines for the NHS.
Last year Amazon saw its UK corporation tax bill fall to £4.6m despite profits tripling to £80m and turnover reaching more than £2bn. The Conservatives have suggested they will bring in an “Amazon tax” to target digital companies
Source independent.co.uk
Comments
Post a Comment