Contact Tracing: Personal Privacy

Lord Scriven Excerpts
Thursday 11th June 2020

(3 years, 10 months ago)

Lords Chamber
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Lord Bethell Portrait Lord Bethell [V]
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My Lords, the greatest insight from the Isle of Wight experiment was that human contact tracing needed to be the first stage of our rollout of the test and trace programme and that, in the sequence of things, the app should come later, when people have got used to the principle of contact tracing. The use of private companies by the Government is commonplace, and we have had no adverse comment on or reaction to that usage.

Lord Scriven Portrait Lord Scriven (LD) [V]
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Ten years is the norm for holding medical research data, so what epidemiological reasons require data from the app uploaded to the NHS central database to be held for 20 years?

Lord Bethell Portrait Lord Bethell [V]
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My Lords, the data that an individual puts on the app is entirely voluntary. No data is held for more than 28 days until somebody takes a test. Once that test has taken place, the individual has the opportunity to upload further data. That data is held for clinical trials and to help us understand the epidemic. There is the opportunity for us to delete all that data at the end of the epidemic, and that assessment will be made at the right time.