The National Institute for Health Research ARC Greater Manchester, NHSX and the National Data Guardian for Health and Social Care commissioned a set of three online 'Citizen Juries' about health data sharing in a pandemic between March and May 2021, finding broad support for increased data sharing in response to the Covid pandemic.
The feedback has been published as a report, and found that after 36 hours of informed deliberation and information gathering, the 53 participants in the juries concluded that the government was right to use emergency powers to share patient data during the Covid pandemic but greater transparency is needed.
The juries were most supportive of the decision to introduce OpenSAFELY (77% of jurors very much in support) and least supportive of the decision to introduce the NHS COVID-19 Data Store and Platform (38% of jurors very much in support);
A majority of jurors were in favour of all the data sharing initiatives continuing for as long as they were valuable (potentially beyond the pandemic and for non-Covid 19 uses), with support ranging from 58% for the NHS COVID-19 Data Store and Platform to 87% for OpenSAFELY across the three juries.