Indian healthcare gets privacy backbone from new data protection rules

The notification of the Digital Personal Data Protection Rules 2025 has activated provisions of the DPDP Act 2023, significantly impacting the healthcare sector. The law designates medical institutions as data fiduciaries and grants patients rights over their data. Yet, ambiguities in the details pose challenges for healthcare providers.

The Digital Personal Data Protection Act 2023, along with the recently notified Rules of 2025, marks India's most significant privacy reform since the IT Act 2000. These measures promote respect for individual rights and data accountability. In healthcare, every clinic, hospital, laboratory, and telemedicine application is elevated to the status of a "data fiduciary," without distinction based on size. Personal data in digital form, or later digitized, falls under the Act's scope.

Patients become "data principals" entitled to access, correct, and erase their medical information. Hospital consent forms have often relied on blind faith rather than informed choice, but the DPDP Act introduces transparency. During medical emergencies or public health crises, data processing without consent is permitted. However, ambiguities persist in areas like post-operative ICU care, chronic illness management, and follow-up treatments.

Withdrawing consent or requesting data erasure creates complications for healthcare providers. Fiduciaries must delete the data and cease processing it, yet legal obligations in healthcare remain intact. The Act's definition of "processing" includes "erasure," potentially requiring consent even for deletions. Schedule III of the Rules prescribes data retention timelines for various sectors, but healthcare is notably absent, leaving institutions uncertain about record-keeping.

For data collected before the Act's commencement, fiduciaries must notify principals "as soon as reasonably practicable," with no defined time limit. According to authors Tishampati Sen, an advocate at the Supreme Court, and Harsh Mahajan, founder of Mahajan Labs and FICCI health mentor, the healthcare sector warrants sector-specific guidelines due to its critical nature. Overall, the law empowers patients by affirming their data rights and reminds providers that duty of care now extends to digital realms.

Связанные статьи

Illustration of a doctor disappointed by low 3.6% usage stats for electronic patient records in a clinic waiting room.
Изображение, созданное ИИ

Использование электронной карты пациента остается низким

Сообщено ИИ Изображение, созданное ИИ

Несмотря на новые обязательства для врачебных кабинетов и клиник, только 3,6 процента застрахованных по обязательному страхованию активно используют электронную карту пациента. Опрос RedaktionsNetzwerks Deutschland среди крупных медицинских страховщиков показывает небольшое увеличение с июля 2025 года. Надежды на рост использования за счет автоматического заполнения записей не оправдались.

The Office of the Data Protection Commissioner (ODPC) has warned private security firms in Kenya against unlawfully harvesting excessive personal data from visitors. In a draft guidance note, the ODPC states that only names, identification numbers, and entry times should be collected for building access. This alert comes amid rising cyber threats and major data breaches in the country.

Сообщено ИИ

The Kenyan government has implemented a new digital system to oversee healthcare delivery in real time, as explained by Public Health Principal Secretary Mary Muthoni. This system, enabled by the 2023 Digital Health Act, tracks activities across all 47 counties to ensure accountability and prevent fraud.

Following recent calls from dozens of health groups to phase out the controversial Medical Assistance to Indigent and Financially Incapacitated Patients (MAIFIP) program, Senate committees have endorsed a bill to make it a permanent part of the Universal Health Care (UHC) system—despite critics labeling it lawmakers' 'health pork.' Senate Bill No. 1593, consolidating four proposals, was approved at the committee level and awaits plenary debate.

Сообщено ИИ

The Brazilian federal government has extended the deadline to February 13 for tech companies to submit adaptation measures to the ECA Digital, a law aimed at protecting children and adolescents online. The extension was announced by ANPD due to the complexity of legal requirements and the year-end holiday period. This initial phase monitors 37 companies, including giants like Google and Meta.

India's Parliament has passed the Sabko Bima Sabko Raksha Bill, 2025, in both houses, amending key insurance laws to permit 100 per cent foreign direct investment. The legislation seeks to expand insurance coverage to achieve 'Insurance for All by 2047'. Opposition parties have voiced concerns over privatization's impact on domestic interests.

Сообщено ИИ

The Kenya Medical Practitioners, Pharmacists and Dentists' Union has rejected a government proposal to impose time-based limits on insurance claims pre-authorization. The union argues that the healthcare system's challenges make such restrictions impractical. This comes amid efforts to curb doctors' private practices during official hours.

 

 

 

Этот сайт использует куки

Мы используем куки для анализа, чтобы улучшить наш сайт. Прочитайте нашу политику конфиденциальности для дополнительной информации.
Отклонить