STAT November 15, 2019
Casey Ross

In deals struck across the U.S., hospital systems appear to be adopting starkly different protocols for sharing personal health information with Google (GOOGL), fueling broad concerns about the ability of patients to control the use of their data.

In a controversial collaboration with the hospital chain Ascension, Google gained access to millions of patient records, including names and birthdates, so it could use its artificial intelligence tools to analyze the information. The arrangement has triggered a fact-finding review by federal regulators.

Two months ago, Google struck a similar partnership with Mayo Clinic that differed in one key respect: Executives with both organizations emphasized to a STAT reporter that any data accessed by Google for analysis would be anonymized.

And in...

Today's Sponsors

LEK
ZeOmega

Today's Sponsor

LEK

 
Topics: Cloud, EMR / EHR, Health IT, Health System / Hospital, Patient / Consumer, Provider, Technology
Why the former Allscripts is banking on AI
5 Trends That Will Determine The Hospital From The Future - April 2024
How A Decades-Old Medical Records Company Made A Huge AI Bet To Save Itself
2 business moves pulling physicians from care, per 1 oncology leader
Increasing EMR System Satisfaction Through Personalisation

Share This Article