OpenAlex · Aktualisierung stündlich · Letzte Aktualisierung: 19.03.2026, 16:31

Dies ist eine Übersichtsseite mit Metadaten zu dieser wissenschaftlichen Arbeit. Der vollständige Artikel ist beim Verlag verfügbar.

The Digital Personal Data Protection Act and Rules: Implications for Health Care and Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Challenges Analysis

2026·0 Zitationen·Journal of Marine Medical SocietyOpen Access
Volltext beim Verlag öffnen

0

Zitationen

3

Autoren

2026

Jahr

Abstract

Abstract India’s Digital Personal Data Protection (DPDP) Act 2023 and the draft DPDP Rules 2025 were set in the background of international resolutions, statutes, and evolving healthcare environment. The legislative journey can be traced from the World Health Assembly (2005) India’s National Health Policy (2017), the Srikrishna Committee report, and the emergent need for robust data-sharing regulations following major breaches such as the 2022 All-India Institute of Medical Sciences cyberattack. The DPDP Act is an umbrella legislation for all forms of digital personal data, including healthcare data. The DPDP Act introduces clear definitions for Data Principal, Data Fiduciary, Data Processor, Consent Manager, and Data Protection Officer, establishing empowered patient rights and rigorous accountability for data handlers. Key provisions focus on informed consent, data localization, rights of correction and erasure, and mandated privacy safeguards. For hospitals, compliance demands substantial investment in IT infrastructure, records digitization, and staff training, raising both capital and operational costs. A strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and challenges analysis details benefits – including patient empowerment, global alignment, and improved interoperability – while identifying persistent gaps: limited protection for health data, unaddressed issues in medical tourism, and ambiguity around paper records and retrospective consent. The act’s efficacy depends on sustained technological investment, staff education, regulatory clarity, and alignment with broader health IT standards. Ultimately, the DPDP Act is positioned as a transformative milestone for Indian health care, promising enhanced patient trust and data security but facing practical and regulatory challenges requiring ongoing review, sectoral dialogue, and future policy refinement to maximize its impact.

Ähnliche Arbeiten

Autoren

Institutionen

Themen

COVID-19 Digital Contact TracingPatient Dignity and PrivacyArtificial Intelligence in Healthcare and Education
Volltext beim Verlag öffnen