GDPR Compliance: How to manage your Data Protection during Covid-19?
GDPR Guidelines: how to manage and comply with customer’s personal data during Covid-19.
Governments, as well as public, private, and voluntary organisations, are taking necessary steps to contain the spread and mitigate the effects of COVID-19, widely referred to as the ‘coronavirus’. Many of these steps will involve the processing of personal data (such as name, address, workplace, travel details) of individuals, including in many cases sensitive, ‘special category’ personal data (such as data relating to health).
Data protection law does not stand in the way of the provision of healthcare and the management of public health issues. Nevertheless, there are important considerations which should be taken into account when handling personal data in these contexts, particularly health and other sensitive data.
Measures taken in response to COVID-19 involving the use of personal data, including health data, should be necessary and proportionate. Decisions in this regard should come from guidance and directions of public health authorities, or other relevant authorities.
Organisations should also have regard to the following obligations.
Lawfulness
Employers also have a legal obligation to protect their employees under the Safety, Health and Welfare at Work Act 2005 (as amended)[2]. This obligation, together with Article 9(2)(b) GDPR provides a legal basis to manage personal data, including health data, where it is deemed necessary and proportionate to do so. Any data that is processed must be treated confidentially. Also, any communications to staff about the possible presence of COVID-19 in the workplace should not generally identify any individual employees.
It is also permissible to process personal data to protect the vital interests of an individual data subject or other persons where necessary. A person’s health data may be processed in this regard where they are physically or legally incapable of giving their consent.[3] It will typically apply only in emergencies, where no other legal basis can be identified.
Transparency
Organisations processing personal data must be transparent regarding the measures they implement in this context, including the purpose of collecting the personal data and how long it will be in retention for. They must provide individuals with information regarding the processing of their personal data in a format that is concise, easily accessible, easy to understand, and in clear and understandable language.
Confidentiality
Any data processing in the context of preventing the spread of COVID-19 must be carried out in a manner that ensures the security of the data, in particular, where health data is concerned. Third parties or colleagues should not have access to the identity of affected individuals without a clear justification.
Data Minimisation
As with any data processing, only the minimum necessary amount of data should be processed to achieve the purpose of implementing measures to prevent or contain the spread of COVID-19.
Accountability
Controllers should also ensure they document any decision-making process regarding measures implemented to manage COVID-19, which involve the processing of personal data.
Further information on COVID-19, including guidance for employers and the general public, can be found on the website of the Health Protection Surveillance Centre
Those seeking more detailed information on Data Protection obligations can consult our guidance on the basics of data protection, ensuring than any processing is in line with the principles of data protection, and identifying the legal basis which justifies the processing of personal data.
The European Data Protection Board (EDPB) has also adopted a statement on the processing of personal data in the context of the COVID-19 outbreak, which provides further guidance on the lawfulness of processing and the special rules regarding the use of location data to monitor, contain, or mitigate the spread of COVID-19.
Questions
We have been asked a number of questions by organisations and employers about how they can ensure any measures carried out are compliant with data protection law; some examples include:
Source: DPC | www.dataprotection.ie
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