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Article

24 Feb 2021

Author:
Mary Fitzgerald and Cori Crider, openDemocracy

Commentary: Why we’re suing over the £23m NHS data deal with Palantir

We’ve just issued [the UK government] a lawsuit over their £23m NHS data deal with controversial ‘spy tech’ company Palantir.

... The government claimed the initial Palantir ‘datastore’ deal, signed last March, was a short-term, emergency response to the pandemic. But December's new, two-year contract reaches far beyond COVID: to Brexit, general business planning and much more.

... How does all this sit with the current drive to combat ‘vaccine hesitancy’ among Black, Asian and migrant communities in the UK? Striking quiet deals with firms like Palantir, especially with no real public dialogue, risks demolishing trust in the NHS among the very communities where the government now urgently seeks to shore up trust.

As Kailash Chand, former deputy chair of the British Medical Association, put it: “The secrecy around what the government is doing with NHS data, working with companies like Palantir, will damage what trust is left amongst ethnic communities, for migrants, and in the NHS family as a whole. It makes it difficult for people like me to convince ethnic minority people that this is being done in their best interests.”

... The government has a legal duty to consult us, citizens and NHS users, before they strike massive deals which affect that future. In doing so, they need to take important steps (like conducting ‘data protection impact assessments’) to ensure our health information and our rights are protected. They haven’t done this for the Palantir datastore: that’s why we’re bringing this case.

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openDemocracy sues UK govt. over £23m NHS data deal with Palantir

UK: openDemocracy sues UK govt. over secretive £23m NHS data deal with Palantir