Recital 53

Recital 53

General Data Protection Regulation · UE 2016/679

(53)

Special categories of personal data which merit higher protection should be processed for health-related purposes only where necessary to achieve those purposes for the benefit of natural persons and society as a whole, in particular in the context of the management of health or social care services and systems, including processing by the management and central national health authorities of such data for the purpose of quality control, management information and the general national and local supervision of the health or social care system, and ensuring continuity of health or social care and cross-border healthcare or health security, monitoring and alert purposes, or for archiving purposes in the public interest, scientific or historical research purposes or statistical purposes, based on Union or Member State law which has to meet an objective of public interest, as well as for studies conducted in the public interest in the area of public health. Therefore, this Regulation should provide for harmonised conditions for the processing of special categories of personal data concerning health, in respect of specific needs, in particular where the processing of such data is carried out for certain health-related purposes by persons subject to a legal obligation of professional secrecy. Union or Member State law should provide for specific and suitable measures so as to protect the fundamental rights and the personal data of natural persons. Member States should be allowed to maintain or introduce further conditions, including limitations, with regard to the processing of genetic data, biometric data or data concerning health. However, this should not hamper the free flow of personal data within the Union when those conditions apply to cross-border processing of such data.

Luxembourg specificity
loi luxembourgeoise du 24 juillet 2014 relative aux droits et obligations du patient, et loi du 1er aout 2018 portant organisation de la CNPD

In Luxembourg, the processing of health data is governed by the Law of 24 July 2014 on patients' rights and obligations, the Law of 1 August 2018 organising the CNPD (Articles 65 and 66 on additional conditions) and the Social Security Code. The CNPD requires a systematic DPIA for any large-scale processing of health data, in line with its list of processing activities subject to mandatory DPIA published in 2018.

Luxgap practice: for any electronic patient record (DSP), telemedicine or clinical research in Luxembourg, we combine national legal basis + DPIA + medical professional secrecy clause enforceable against cloud processors, with prior CNPD validation if data flows to eHDSI.