Genomic Privacy Project |
by Bradley Malin and Latanya Sweeney
Keywords: DNA privacy, genetic privacy, privacy technology
Citation:
Abstract
This work demonstrates how seemingly anonymous
DNA database entries can be related to publicly
available health information to uniquely and
specifically identify the persons who are the subjects of
the information even though the DNA information
contains no accompanying explicit identifiers such as
name, address, or Social Security number and contains
no additional fields of personal information. The
software program, REID (Re-Identification of DNA),
iteratively uncovers unique occurrences in visit-disease
patterns across data collections that reveal inferences
about the identities of the patients who are the subject
of the DNA. Using real-world data, REID established
identifiable linkages in 33-100% of the 10,886 cases
explicitly surveyed over 8 gene-based diseases.
Malin, B. and Sweeney, L.
Re-Identification of DNA through an
Automated Linkage Process.
Proceedings, Journal of the American Medical Informatics
Association (AMIA). Washington, DC: Hanley & Belfus, Inc. Nov 2001; 423-427. Also available on MEDLINE.
(PDF).
Related Links
Fall 2004
[Data Privacy Lab]