HHS Proposes Public Utility Model for Health Data
- •HHS proposes treating patient health data as a regulated public utility for research advancement
- •Policy forum in Science suggests governing medical data flow similar to an electrical grid
- •Transition from structured clinical trials to mining real-world digitized patient interactions as natural resources
The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) is reimagining the bedrock of medical research by proposing that patient health data be treated as a public utility. This shift marks a departure from the traditional reliance on structured clinical trials, moving instead toward a model where the vast "natural resource" of digitized patient interactions is mined for insights.
In a recent policy forum published in Science, former agency officials and researchers argued that this utility model requires a sophisticated governance structure similar to the electrical grid. This framework would involve a complex network of "generators" (hospitals and clinics), "transmission companies" (data aggregators), and "customers" (researchers and patients), all operating under government oversight to ensure transparency and trust.
The Living HHS Open Data Plan emphasizes that data is the fuel for scientific advancement and clinical AI development. By establishing a regulated ecosystem, the agency aims to streamline access for safety monitoring and innovation while protecting patient rights. Proponents argue that without this structural overhaul, the potential of real-world data remains trapped within fragmented silos, hindering the progress of high-stakes medical breakthroughs.