Part of the "2016 Annual Conference: Big Data, Health Law, and Bioethics" held at Harvard Law School on May 6, 2016.
This conference aimed to: (1) identify the various ways in which law and ethics intersect with the use of big data in health care and health research, particularly in the United States; (2) understand the way U.S. law (and potentially other legal systems) currently promotes or stands as an obstacle to these potential uses; (3) determine what might be learned from the legal and ethical treatment of uses of big data in other sectors and countries; and (4) examine potential solutions (industry best practices, common law, legislative, executive, domestic and international) for better use of big data in health care and health research in the U.S.
The Petrie-Flom Center for Health Law Policy, Biotechnology, and Bioethics at Harvard Law School 2016 annual conference was organized in collaboration with the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University and the Health Ethics and Policy Lab, University of Zurich.
Learn more at http://petrieflom.law.harvard.edu/events/details/2016-annual-conference.
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Nicolas Terry, "Big Data, Regulatory Disruption, and Arbitrage in Health Care"
1. Regulatory Disruption and Arbitrage
in Healthcare Data Protection
@nicolasterry
Hall RenderProfessor of Law
& Executive Director of the Hall Center for Law and Health
Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law
2. • Increasingly large amounts of sensitive healthcare data exist in
lightly regulated space outside reach of traditional healthcare
data protection
• Results:
• Regulatory disruption as stakeholders struggle with under-
regulation and indeterminacy
• For data brokers, successful regulatory arbitrage enabled;
doing in lightly-protected space what they are prohibited
from doing in HIPAA-space
• Deprecation of traditionally high levels of health data
protection and challenges to ACA principles
• Proposals for legislative reform generally have failed to gain
traction
• Specific and general powers of FTC remain the primary
defenses against big data abuses.
4. Sectoral Data Protection
Health Care Financial Services Genetic Privacy Internet Other
HIPAA GLBA GINALaw
Agency HHS-OCR FTC/SEC/
Banking
EEOC FTC
General (but
limited)
Broadband
FCC
5. Anonymization: Identity not Associated with Data
Inalienablility; Designed to Disincent Collection
Privacy; Limits on Collection
Right to Erasure; Selective Removal
Regulation at Point of Use; e.g., anti-discrimination
Security; Repelling Outsiders (Identity Thieves)
Confidentiality; Limits on Disclosure
Breach Notification; “The Horse Has Left the Barn”
Upstream
Downstream
9. “We have one of the largest and most comprehensive
collections of healthcare information in the world,
spanning sales, prescription and promotional data,
medical claims, electronic medical records and social
media. Our scaled and growing data set, containing
over 10 petabytes of unique data, includes over 85% of
the world’s prescriptions by sales revenue and
approximately 400 million comprehensive, longitudinal,
anonymous patient records. We standardize, organize,
structure and integrate this data by applying our
sophisticated analytics and leveraging our global
technology infrastructure to help our clients run their
organizations more efficiently and make better
decisions to improve their operational and financial
performance.” IMS
Health
Holdings,
Inc.,
Form
S-‐‑1,
Registration
Statement
under
The
Securities
Act
Of
1933,
10. Scoring personal health.…In 2014,
there were at least a dozen health
scores available in the marketplace,
including the Affordable Care Act
(ACA) Individual Health Risk Score,
FICO Medication Adherence Score,
several frailty scores, personal health
scores (e.g., WebMD, One Health
Score), and medical complexity
scores (e.g., Aristotle for scoring of
surgery for congenital health
conditions). Consumers are largely
unaware of the existence and use of
these scores and the algorithms that
create them.
[A] “body score” may someday be
even more important than your credit
score. Mobile medical apps and social
networks offer powerful opportunities
to find support, form communities, and
address health issues. But they also
offer unprecedented surveillance of
health data, largely ungoverned by
traditional health privacy laws (which
focus on doctors, hospitals, and
insurers). Furthermore, they open the
door to frightening and manipulative
uses of that data by ranking
intermediaries— data scorers and
brokers— and the businesses,
employers, and government agencies
they inform.
11. • The ACA prohibits pre-existing condition exclusions,
discriminatory premium rates, and generally requires
guaranteed issue
• Guaranteed issue and related regulations generally do not
apply to life insurers who are customers for big data proxies
• Health insurers who use data-mined prescription drug data to
continue their discrimination against high cost patients
• There is evidence that insurers move drugs associated with
patients with expensive chronic conditions to high cost-
sharing tiers in the hope of discouraging those patients from
applying for coverage
• Unregulated big data has the potential to frustrate some of the
mainstay policies of our healthcare system.
12. Reform Incoherence
1. The White House,Consumer Data Privacy in a Networked World:A Framework for Protecting
Privacy and Promoting Innovation in the Global Digital Economy (2012)
2. Fed. Trade Comm’n,Protecting Consumer Privacy in an Era of Rapid Change:Recommendations
for Businesses and Policymakers (2012)
3. The White House,The Big Data and Privacy Review (2014)
4. Fed. Trade Comm’n,Data Brokers: A Call for Transparency and Accountability (2014)
5. PCAST, Big Data and Privacy: A Technological Perspective (2014)
6. Administration Discussion Draft:Consumer Privacy Bill of Rights Act of 2015
7. Health IT Policy Committee,Privacy and Security Workgroup,Recommendations on Health Big
Data (2015)
8. The White House,Big Data:Seizing Opportunities,Preserving Values (2015)
9. FTC, Big Data: A Tool for Inclusion or Exclusion? (2016)
10.The White House,Big Data:A Reporton Algorithmic Systems, Opportunity, and Civil Rights (2016)
14. Q & A
Mail: npterry@iupui.edu
Twitter: @nicolasterry
Podcast: TWIHL.com
Nicolas Terry
Hall Render Professor of Law
& Executive Director of the Hall Center for Law and Health
Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law