Difference between revisions of "COVID-19, Scientific Research and the GDPR – Some Basic Principles (Q4243)"

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(‎Created a new Item: COVID-19, Scientific Research and the GDPR – Some Basic Principles, blog posted on March 202, 2020)
 
 
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Property / official website: https://www.insideprivacy.com/covid-19/covid-19-scientific-research-and-the-gdpr-some-basic-principles/ / rank
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Property / concerns: General Data Protection Regulation / rank
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20 March 2020
Timestamp+2020-03-20T00:00:00Z
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CalendarGregorian
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The GDPR does apply to the personal data of any living individual, and those who are unfortunate enough to host the virus. The scope of the GDPR is broad. It typically applies to data that has been pseudonymized or coded (e., line data where the responsible physician or institute replaced the name of the patient with a code).
Property / quote: The GDPR does apply to the personal data of any living individual, and those who are unfortunate enough to host the virus. The scope of the GDPR is broad. It typically applies to data that has been pseudonymized or coded (e., line data where the responsible physician or institute replaced the name of the patient with a code). / rank
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the GDPR allows lawfully collected data (g., health care data) to be re-used for scientific research, without consent, provided appropriate safeguards are in place, such as key-coding (Art. 5(1)(b) & 89(1) GDPR);
Property / quote: the GDPR allows lawfully collected data (g., health care data) to be re-used for scientific research, without consent, provided appropriate safeguards are in place, such as key-coding (Art. 5(1)(b) & 89(1) GDPR); / rank
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Latest revision as of 12:37, 23 March 2020

blog posted on March 202, 2020
Language Label Description Also known as
English
COVID-19, Scientific Research and the GDPR – Some Basic Principles
blog posted on March 202, 2020

    Statements

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    20 March 2020
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    The GDPR does apply to the personal data of any living individual, and those who are unfortunate enough to host the virus. The scope of the GDPR is broad. It typically applies to data that has been pseudonymized or coded (e., line data where the responsible physician or institute replaced the name of the patient with a code).
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    the GDPR allows lawfully collected data (g., health care data) to be re-used for scientific research, without consent, provided appropriate safeguards are in place, such as key-coding (Art. 5(1)(b) & 89(1) GDPR);
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