Processing of personal and medical data by judicial institutions in the context of the enforcement of Regulation EU 2016/679 – General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)
The protection of patients’ personal and
medical data has always been an important subject for medical practice,
with explicit regulations being implemented. Whether we are talking
about civil and criminal codes or laws governing the medical profession,
they all seek to protect fundamental human rights. The confidentiality
of medical data is maintained even after the death of the patient, this
aspect being governed since the profiling of the physician profession
through the Hippocratic Oath. Discussions on privacy and confidentiality
occupy an important place in sociological, medical, legal, ethical and
anthropological literature.
There are references to the benefits
gained by improving accessibility to data as they migrate to computer
environments. Along with the technological evolution, all of this data
has been transferred to electronic systems. A major concern with the
trend towards electronic health records focuses on protecting privacy
and patient confidentiality (Vanderminden and Potter, 2016). Data
transfer, as well as their processing through many computer systems
belonging to different public and private entities, brings new
challenges at the individual and social level. Under the protection
afforded by the right of individuals to access to information and the
current tendency to ease access to information, a number of institutions
have created online portals that manage a huge amount of data. The way
these data are processed in accordance with the rights of the individual
remains an issue that is not fully resolved.
On the occasion of a doctoral research on medical malpractice, I
conducted the interrogation of the portal of Romanian courts
(http://portal.just.ro). A huge amount of data can be obtained easily in
a short time. In the context of the expected impact of the
implementation of the GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) in
relation to the functioning of the public institutions, I conducted a
qualitative research looking at how medical data and personal data are
managed by the courts. Decisions of the courts published in the
jurisprudence section have been analyzed.
The paper analyzes the compliance of the
judicial public institutions with the data protection legislation
considered in the paradigm of institutional logic. We can assume that
the individualistic principle exercised by the professional institution
(the medical profession) can conflict and require a balancing with the
utilitarian, collective principle, which can explain some of the state
institution’s actions (courts of justice).
GDPR aims to reinforce existing legal
provisions. GDPR does not seem to bring about changes in the substance
of laws or doctrines on data confidentiality, but appears to be a form
of supra-state control. The way in which GDPR will influence policies
and practices regarding the processing of personal and medical data will
be analyzed with the passage of time.
Processing of personal and medical data by judicial institutions in the context of the enforcement of Regulation EU 2016/679 – General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).
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Processing of personal and medical data by judicial institutions in the context of the enforcement of Regulation EU 2016/679 – General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).
Autori:
Radu-Mihai
Dumitrescu
[1]
[1]
Faculty of Sociology and Social Work, University of Bucharest
Rezumat
The protection of patients’ personal and
medical data has always been an important subject for medical practice,
with explicit regulations being implemented. Whether we are talking
about civil and criminal codes or laws governing the medical profession,
they all seek to protect fundamental human rights. The confidentiality
of medical data is maintained even after the death of the patient, this
aspect being governed since the profiling of the physician profession
through the Hippocratic Oath. Discussions on privacy and confidentiality
occupy an important place in sociological, medical, legal, ethical and
anthropological literature.
There are references to the benefits
gained by improving accessibility to data as they migrate to computer
environments. Along with the technological evolution, all of this data
has been transferred to electronic systems. A major concern with the
trend towards electronic health records focuses on protecting privacy
and patient confidentiality (Vanderminden and Potter, 2016). Data
transfer, as well as their processing through many computer systems
belonging to different public and private entities, brings new
challenges at the individual and social level. Under the protection
afforded by the right of individuals to access to information and the
current tendency to ease access to information, a number of institutions
have created online portals that manage a huge amount of data. The way
these data are processed in accordance with the rights of the individual
remains an issue that is not fully resolved.
On the occasion of a doctoral research on medical malpractice, I
conducted the interrogation of the portal of Romanian courts
(http://portal.just.ro). A huge amount of data can be obtained easily in
a short time. In the context of the expected impact of the
implementation of the GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) in
relation to the functioning of the public institutions, I conducted a
qualitative research looking at how medical data and personal data are
managed by the courts. Decisions of the courts published in the
jurisprudence section have been analyzed.
The paper analyzes the compliance of the
judicial public institutions with the data protection legislation
considered in the paradigm of institutional logic. We can assume that
the individualistic principle exercised by the professional institution
(the medical profession) can conflict and require a balancing with the
utilitarian, collective principle, which can explain some of the state
institution’s actions (courts of justice).
GDPR aims to reinforce existing legal
provisions. GDPR does not seem to bring about changes in the substance
of laws or doctrines on data confidentiality, but appears to be a form
of supra-state control. The way in which GDPR will influence policies
and practices regarding the processing of personal and medical data will
be analyzed with the passage of time.
Cuvinte cheie:
Personal data, medical data, medical malpractice, privacy, GDPR
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