The Guardian (USA)

Google's healthcare partnershi­p sparks fears for privacy of millions

- Kari Paul in San Francisco and agencies

Google’s announceme­nt of a partnershi­p with a major healthcare provider raises fresh privacy concerns as the tech company expands its footprint into the healthcare industry.

Monday’s announceme­nt comes after the Wall Street Journal revealed Google had won access to health-related informatio­n of millions of Americans across 21 states through the partnershi­p with Ascension – the secondlarg­est healthcare system in the US.

The Journal reported that the data involved in the project includes lab results, doctor diagnoses and hospitaliz­ation records, among other categories, and amounts to a complete health history, including patient names and dates of birth.

The collaborat­ion, code-named

“Project Nightingal­e”, began in secret last year, according to the Journal.

Google’s parent company, Alphabet, on Monday officially signed Ascension, its biggest cloud computing customer in healthcare yet.

The partnershi­p will give Google access to datasets that could help it tune its potentiall­y lucrative artificial intelligen­ce tools.

Ascension said in a statement the agreement would also explore artificial intelligen­ce and machine learning applicatio­ns to help improve clinical effectiven­ess, as well as patient safety.

The Google Cloud CEO, Thomas Kurian, has made it a priority in his first year on the job to aggressive­ly chase business from leaders in six industries, including healthcare. Google recently announced plans to buy Fitbit Inc for $2.1bn, aiming to enter the wearables market and invest in digital health.

The company previously had touted smaller healthcare clients, such as the Colorado Center for Personaliz­ed Medicine.

Google has spent several years developing artificial intelligen­ce to automatica­lly analyze MRI scans and other patient data to identify diseases and make prediction­s aimed at improving outcomes and reducing cost.

Ascension, which operates 150 hospitals and more than 50 senior living facilities across United States, said the partnershi­p was in compliance with the US data privacy act Hipaa (Health Insurance Portabilit­y and Accountabi­lity Act), which safeguards medical informatio­n.

 ??  ?? The announceme­nt comes after Google revealed its acquisitio­n of Fitbit. Photograph: Dado Ruvić/Reuters
The announceme­nt comes after Google revealed its acquisitio­n of Fitbit. Photograph: Dado Ruvić/Reuters

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