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Open consent, biobanking and data protection law: can open consent be ‘informed’ under the forthcoming data protection regulation?

This article focuses on whether a certain form of consent used by biobanks – open consent – is compatible with the Proposed Data Protection Regulation. In an open consent procedure, the biobank requests consent once from the data subject for all future research uses of genetic material and data. How...

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Autores principales: Hallinan, Dara, Friedewald, Michael
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer Berlin Heidelberg 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4480798/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26085311
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40504-014-0020-9
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author Hallinan, Dara
Friedewald, Michael
author_facet Hallinan, Dara
Friedewald, Michael
author_sort Hallinan, Dara
collection PubMed
description This article focuses on whether a certain form of consent used by biobanks – open consent – is compatible with the Proposed Data Protection Regulation. In an open consent procedure, the biobank requests consent once from the data subject for all future research uses of genetic material and data. However, as biobanks process personal data, they must comply with data protection law. Data protection law is currently undergoing reform. The Proposed Data Protection Regulation is the culmination of this reform and, if voted into law, will constitute a new legal framework for biobanking. The Regulation puts strict conditions on consent – in particular relating to information which must be given to the data subject. It seems clear that open consent cannot meet these requirements. 4 categories of information cannot be provided with adequate specificity: purpose, recipient, possible third country transfers, data collected. However, whilst open consent cannot meet the formal requirements laid out by the Regulation, this is not to say that these requirements are substantially undebateable. Two arguments could be put forward suggesting the applicable consent requirements should be rethought. First, from policy documents regarding the drafting process, it seems that the informational requirements in the Regulation are so strict in order to protect the data subject from risks inherent in the use of the consent mechanism in a certain context – exemplified by the online context. There are substantial differences between this context and the biobanking context. Arguably, a consent transaction in the biobanking does not present the same type of risk to the data subject. If the risks are different, then perhaps there are also grounds for a reconsideration of consent requirements? Second, an argument can be made that the legislator drafted the Regulation based on certain assumptions as to the nature of ‘data’. The authors argue that these assumptions are difficult to apply to genetic data and accordingly a different approach to consent might be preferable. Such an approach might be more open consent friendly.
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spelling pubmed-44807982015-07-22 Open consent, biobanking and data protection law: can open consent be ‘informed’ under the forthcoming data protection regulation? Hallinan, Dara Friedewald, Michael Life Sci Soc Policy Research Article This article focuses on whether a certain form of consent used by biobanks – open consent – is compatible with the Proposed Data Protection Regulation. In an open consent procedure, the biobank requests consent once from the data subject for all future research uses of genetic material and data. However, as biobanks process personal data, they must comply with data protection law. Data protection law is currently undergoing reform. The Proposed Data Protection Regulation is the culmination of this reform and, if voted into law, will constitute a new legal framework for biobanking. The Regulation puts strict conditions on consent – in particular relating to information which must be given to the data subject. It seems clear that open consent cannot meet these requirements. 4 categories of information cannot be provided with adequate specificity: purpose, recipient, possible third country transfers, data collected. However, whilst open consent cannot meet the formal requirements laid out by the Regulation, this is not to say that these requirements are substantially undebateable. Two arguments could be put forward suggesting the applicable consent requirements should be rethought. First, from policy documents regarding the drafting process, it seems that the informational requirements in the Regulation are so strict in order to protect the data subject from risks inherent in the use of the consent mechanism in a certain context – exemplified by the online context. There are substantial differences between this context and the biobanking context. Arguably, a consent transaction in the biobanking does not present the same type of risk to the data subject. If the risks are different, then perhaps there are also grounds for a reconsideration of consent requirements? Second, an argument can be made that the legislator drafted the Regulation based on certain assumptions as to the nature of ‘data’. The authors argue that these assumptions are difficult to apply to genetic data and accordingly a different approach to consent might be preferable. Such an approach might be more open consent friendly. Springer Berlin Heidelberg 2015-01-24 /pmc/articles/PMC4480798/ /pubmed/26085311 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40504-014-0020-9 Text en © Hallinan and Friedewald; licensee Springer. 2015 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Hallinan, Dara
Friedewald, Michael
Open consent, biobanking and data protection law: can open consent be ‘informed’ under the forthcoming data protection regulation?
title Open consent, biobanking and data protection law: can open consent be ‘informed’ under the forthcoming data protection regulation?
title_full Open consent, biobanking and data protection law: can open consent be ‘informed’ under the forthcoming data protection regulation?
title_fullStr Open consent, biobanking and data protection law: can open consent be ‘informed’ under the forthcoming data protection regulation?
title_full_unstemmed Open consent, biobanking and data protection law: can open consent be ‘informed’ under the forthcoming data protection regulation?
title_short Open consent, biobanking and data protection law: can open consent be ‘informed’ under the forthcoming data protection regulation?
title_sort open consent, biobanking and data protection law: can open consent be ‘informed’ under the forthcoming data protection regulation?
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4480798/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26085311
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40504-014-0020-9
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