Canada’s AI strategy aims to make health data more accessible. How will it protect privacy?
Canada’s AI strategy aims to make health data more accessible. How will it protect privacy?
https://www.cbc.ca/news/health/vital-health-data-privacy-9.7245577
Publish Date: 2026-06-24 04:00:00
Source Domain: www.cbc.ca
- The federal government plans to invest $100 million to make Canadian health data more accessible to researchers as part of its national AI strategy.
- The initiative aims to connect data across Canada to facilitate clinical trials, AI tool testing, and innovation in treatment and diagnosis.
- To ensure privacy, the initiative will remove identifying information and secure data in Canadian-owned platforms and data centres.
- The government emphasizes the need to balance public benefits and privacy safeguards, with data being kept in secure infrastructure accessible only to approved researchers.
- The effort expands the existing Vital platform and addresses concerns about data usage, transparency, and potential algorithm biases.
- The funding aims to improve health outcomes and attract global research, positioning Canada to tap into a billion-dollar clinical trial market.
- Privacy measures include storing data in Canada, encryption, and rigorous best practices, with key identifiers excluded from accessible datasets.
- Federal protections also involve strong cybersecurity and stringent access controls to trusted researchers from Canadian institutions.