Data Protection Act and Anonymisation of Research Data

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Presentation transcript:

Data Protection Act and Anonymisation of Research Data Arja Kuula, Research Officer Finnish Social Science Data Archive

Presentation Based on Finnish practices, does not cover register data Open access applies only to the scientific community Data Protection Act in the archiving process Anonymisation of both quantitative and qualitative data Do we always need to anonymise research data? NO

Data Protection Act and Archiving Checking whether the prerequisites for processing personal data are fulfilled Primary prerequisite is that the data subject has unambiguously consented to the processing Usually researchers give information about purpose and content of the research Data: “confidentiality will be safeguarded and personal identifiers will not be published”. Nothing about the preservation or future uses of data.

Nothing mentioned of archiving FSD has two options: 1) the researcher gives us a mandate to ask each participant separately whether he/she agrees to archiving, or 2) we have to apply Section 14 of the Data Protection Act

Section 14 of Data Protection Act Personal data may be processed for historical or scientific research also without consent if the research cannot be carried out without data identifying the person if the consent of data subjects cannot be obtained because of the age or quantity of the data use of personal data files are based on an appropriate research plan a person or a group of persons are nominated as responsible for the research project the data pertaining to a given individual are not disclosed to any outsiders after the research project has ended, personal data files will be destroyed or transferred to an archive, or the data are altered so that data subjects can no longer be identified

Anonymising of quantitative data Starting point: reviewing the dataset as a whole Information given to participants Background variables Variables based on open-ended responses Subject matter of the data

Anonymisation of quantitative data Removal – eliminating the variable from dataset entirely Bracketing – combining the categories of a variable Removing identifiers from open-ended questions Top-coding – grouping the upper range of a variable to eliminate outliers Using samples instead of total original study Swapping Disturbing

Anonymisation of qualitative data Starting point: reviewing the material as a whole Information given to participants How detailed the background information of participants is Subject matter of the data

Anonymisation of qualitative data Removing direct identifiers Altering names and other proper names Removing or editing sensitive information Editing background information into categories

Detailed background information can be edited into categories Arja Kuula: 42-year-old research officer working in a separate unit of the University of Tampere, married, with children aged 7 and 12, and living in Tampere: Gender: Female Age: 41-45 Occupation: Professional in the field of research Place of occupation: University (or public sector employer ) Household composition: Husband and two school-age children Place of residence: Town in the province of Western Finland

Is anonymisation always necessary? NO. There is an essential difference between a research publication and research data when it comes to what kind of consequences possible identification might have It should be possible for a researcher to study research subjects more profoundly and in more detail, even when he cannot publish the results in such a detail for confidentiality reasons

Confidentiality Does NOT mean secrecy and heavy anonymisation processes BUT consist of agreements between the researcher and the participants on the future use and preservation of the data DOES mean that identifiable personal information gathered for research purposes cannot be delivered or presented as such to the media or, for example, to administrative officials making decisions affecting research participants

Basic philosophy behind the Data Protection Act To protect individuals and social groups from harmful use of their personal information 1) from the power of markets so that their integrity would not be hurt by very focused and intrusive advertising and 2) from the power of public officials

EU directive on the protection of personal data and the ensuing Finnish Personal Data Act Allow archiving of data containing personal information Level of anonymisation depends on what kind of information on the use and processing of data has been given to participants

Ideal Planning what kind of information to give to research participants takes into account both Data protection legislation Possibility to share the data once the original project has ended

Research participants draw the boundaries of their privacy in two stages When they decide whether they want to participate or not During data collection, when they decide what they want to reveal about themselves and their thoughts to research: they decide what to answer and what not