This article examines the issue of the retention and destruction of personal health information. While legislation in Canada shows some attention to the issue of retaining health records, very little consideration has been given to their destruction. As technological advances have made indefinite retention feasible, serious privacy issues are now being raised by the lack of a standard related to the destruction of health records. The author argues that this issue needs to be explicitly addressed. The author analyzes this problem by looking at issues of autonomy, public good, inequality, and privacy as a social good before offering thoughts on the shape that policies around the destruction of personal health information should take
In Part II, this article examines the justifications for implementing comprehensive national health ...
This paper argues that given the proliferation of electronic health records (EHRs) in the health car...
In this article, we argue in favor of a macro-societal approach to protect people from the potential...
This article examines the issue of the retention and destruction of personal health information. Whi...
In this electronic age of Internet and e-mail, transnational databases, and electronic-commerce, the...
The computerization of health information and medical records, including sensitive personal informat...
Some of the existing literature concerning the privacy of health information seems to suggest that m...
Personal data protection and privacy of personal health information in the electronic era is a broad...
Current conversations about health information policy often tend to be based on three broad assumpti...
The electronic processing of health information provides considerable benefits to patients and healt...
Thoughtful scholarship in the area of informational privacy sometimes assumes that a significant lev...
Bill C-6, more recently known as the Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act, i...
The electronic processing of health information provides considerable benefits to patients and healt...
This paper highlights the costs and benefits associated with the gathering, storing, analyzing, and ...
Collections of computerised personal health data present a very real threat to privacy. Access contr...
In Part II, this article examines the justifications for implementing comprehensive national health ...
This paper argues that given the proliferation of electronic health records (EHRs) in the health car...
In this article, we argue in favor of a macro-societal approach to protect people from the potential...
This article examines the issue of the retention and destruction of personal health information. Whi...
In this electronic age of Internet and e-mail, transnational databases, and electronic-commerce, the...
The computerization of health information and medical records, including sensitive personal informat...
Some of the existing literature concerning the privacy of health information seems to suggest that m...
Personal data protection and privacy of personal health information in the electronic era is a broad...
Current conversations about health information policy often tend to be based on three broad assumpti...
The electronic processing of health information provides considerable benefits to patients and healt...
Thoughtful scholarship in the area of informational privacy sometimes assumes that a significant lev...
Bill C-6, more recently known as the Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act, i...
The electronic processing of health information provides considerable benefits to patients and healt...
This paper highlights the costs and benefits associated with the gathering, storing, analyzing, and ...
Collections of computerised personal health data present a very real threat to privacy. Access contr...
In Part II, this article examines the justifications for implementing comprehensive national health ...
This paper argues that given the proliferation of electronic health records (EHRs) in the health car...
In this article, we argue in favor of a macro-societal approach to protect people from the potential...