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Trusted research environments are definitely about trust.

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Trusted Research Environments (TREs) reduce some risks but do not eliminate all public concerns regarding health data sharing. TREs offer evidence for trust, but the need for public trust remains essential.

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Area of Science:

  • Health Informatics
  • Data Governance
  • Public Trust

Background:

  • Trusted Research Environments (TREs) are increasingly used for accessing sensitive patient health data.
  • A recent paper by Graham et al. argued that TREs negate the need for trust by reducing risks associated with data use.
  • This perspective challenges the notion that mitigating risks inherently removes the need for trust.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To critically evaluate the argument that Trusted Research Environments (TREs) eliminate the need for trust in health data sharing.
  • To assert that TREs, while mitigating risks, do not fully address all public concerns.
  • To emphasize the continued importance of public trust in data stewardship.

Main Methods:

  • Conceptual analysis of the role of trust in data governance frameworks.
  • Critique of the argument presented by Graham et al. regarding TREs and trust.
  • Examination of public concerns beyond technical risk mitigation.

Main Results:

  • TREs mitigate or remove certain risks associated with patient health data access and sharing.
  • However, TREs do not address the full spectrum of public concerns related to data usage.
  • TREs provide evidence that can inform public trust, rather than obviate the need for it.

Conclusions:

  • The argument that TREs remove the need for trust is fundamentally mistaken.
  • While TREs facilitate trust by providing evidence of responsible data handling, they do not eliminate the necessity of that trust.
  • Maintaining public trust remains a critical component of ethical health data governance.