Thursday, February 17, 2022

An international research team led by Prof. Sharifah Sekalala of Warwick Law School has been awarded €1.4 million to examine how to better regulate the collection and migration of health data of people in the global South in order to protect privacy and prevent exploitation of their personal information.

The research team includes Prof. Sekalala, Prof. Bitange Ndemo, University of Nairobi and Prof. Pamela Andanda, University of Witwatersrand, South Africa.

Digital health apps are increasingly popular in Sub-Saharan Africa as a means of delivering health services. But a pilot project by the research team found that most of these health apps are owned and operated by foreign companies, and that health data out-migration from these apps is inadequately regulated.

Annually, health data from over 40 million Africans is harvested by digital companies based in the global north, something which has been described as “digital colonialism.”  

There is no app for this! Regulating the migration of health apps in Sub-Saharan Africa” has been awarded under the Mobility – Global Medicine and Health Research programme, funded by the La Caixa Foundation (Spain), the Novo Nordisk Foundation (Denmark), the Volkswagen Foundation (Germany) and Wellcome (UK).

Focusing on Kenya, Uganda and South Africa, the project brings together a consortium of scholars and activists to examine how to construct regulatory solutions to the problem of health data migration in Africa.

The research will address three questions:

  1. How can the conceptual framework of digital health colonialism help us to understand and resist structural inequities of data migration?
  2. How can we co-create the design of apps to better address issues of privacy and data misuse, given the rapid rate of technological development?
  3. How can we update regulatory frameworks at the Pan-African level?

An important aspect of the work is the commitment to working with civil society organisations, app developers and traditional and non-traditional regulators. Together, the team will devise legal mechanisms to protect the health data of people in the global South by co-creating guidelines for data regulation, and testing their feasibility with app developers and other relevant stakeholders.

Prof. Sekalala notes that “the migration of people has long been a key policy issue for global health, but the global health stakes are also high for the migration of health data. The use of mobile health apps offers huge advantages for health in Africa, where health infrastructure and resources are often limited. However, the emergence and popular uptake of health apps also raise troubling questions: Where does data go? Who has access to it? And who profits from Africans’ health data, particularly once it leaves Africa?”

Prof. Andanda said that the co-creative approach, which we use in this project will go a long way in ensuring that the passive collection of personal data, through health apps, and data migration are properly regulated to respect human dignity.

Prof. Bitange Ndemo noted that the funding from Welcome Trust comes at the right time when there is a growing list of health hubs in Africa especially those that are building health wallets that will have a long-term effect on the people of Africa. The need to interrogate emerging concepts from the health apps is urgent now.

Dr Peter Kilroy at Wellcome added that the rapid rate of technological development in recent years has had profound implications on the global collection and storage of health data. Working with stakeholders across sub-Saharan Africa, this innovative project will be critical in transforming our understanding of the global inequities associated with health data migration, helping to inform regulatory frameworks and promote equitable approaches.