The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) establishes protections for the privacy and security of personal data (Personal Data) about individuals in the European Union (EU) single market countries, and potentially affects the clinical and other scientific research activities of academic medical centers and other research organizations in the United States.
This On the Subject includes frequently asked questions that discuss the extent to which United States research organizations must comply with GDPR when conducting research. Future coverage will address the impact of GDPR on other aspects of the United States health care sector.
Enforceable in all EU member states on 25 May 2018, the General Data Privacy Regulation will require action by organisations both inside and outside the European Union to ensure compliance with this far-reaching privacy legal framework. Compliance is even more urgent given that the GDPR provides for large penalties in cases of infringement. As some entities are not yet aware of the extent to which GDPR may be applicable to them, the GDPR expressly applies to organisations established outside the European Union that offer paid or free goods or services to EU data subjects or monitor EU data subjects’ behaviour.
Within this article, we review steps for a risk based, prioritization approach to GDPR compliance and how companies can adjust their policies and practices on a pragmatic basis to help ensure compliance.
On April 28, 2017, the Italian Data Privacy Authority published a Guide on the application of the new General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). The Guide does not set out implementing rules of the GDPR but rather provides a summary of “what will remain the same” and “what will change” in the main six areas covered by the GDPR:
Legal basis for the processing
Information to be provided to data subjects
Data subjects’ rights
Data controller, data processor and persons in charge of the processing
Data privacy risk assessment and accountability
International transfer of data
In addition, for each of the above six macro areas, the Guide provides recommendations on the measures that companies and public entities can already put in place, in order to ensure compliance with specific provisions of the GDPR, which do not need further intervention at a national level for their implementation.
The Guide will be amended, updated or supplemented in light of the development of the debate at a national and European level on the application of the GDPR. The data protection authorities of France and the Netherlands published similar guides respectively on March 15 and April 13, 2017, which are however structured in a slightly different way, as they propose (especially the French one) a more systematic “step by step” methodology in order to help organizations get ready for the GDPR.
The European Commission’s proposed changes to the current legal framework on data protection will soon be adopted and will impact on EU and non-EU businesses alike.