Abstract
National Statistical Agencies and other data custodians are vital sources of data for research and policy analysis. However, external researchers must be provided with access to data in such a way that privacy and confidentiality are protected. We discuss two recently-implemented research data access systems. The first was developed by the Australian Bureau of Statistics for use with certain of its data collections. The second was developed by the Sax Institute, a non-profit health research non-government organisation, for use by population health and health services researchers to analyse complex, linked administrative health and related data sets provided by a range of data custodians. Although these organisations both chose remote access systems, it is interesting that there are significant differences between the two systems. We discuss the drivers for and consequences of the different choices made.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Australian Government: National commission of audit. Report, Phase I, http://www.ncoa.gov.au
Chipperfield, J., Lucie, S.: Analysis of micro-data: Controlling the risk of disclosure. Research Paper - Methodology Advisory Committee 1352.0.55.110, Australian Bureau of Statistics (2010)
Karr, A., Lee, J., Sanil, A., Hernandez, J., Karimi, S., Litwin, K.: Web-based systems that disseminate information but protect confidentiality. In: McIver, W., Elmagarmid, A. (eds.) Advances in Digital Government: Technology, Human Factors and Public Policy, pp. 181–196. Kluwer, Amsterdam (2002)
Karr, A.F., Dobra, A., Sanil, A.P.: Table servers protect confidentiality in tabular data releases. Commun. ACM 46(1), 57–58 (2003), http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/602421.602451
Kelman, C.W., Bass, A.J., Holman, C.: Research use of linked health data best practice protocol. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health 26(3), 251–255 (2002)
Lucero, J., Zayatz, L., Singh, L., You, J., DePersio, M., Freiman, M.: The Current Stage of the Microdata Analysis System at the U.S. Census Bureau. In: Proc. 58th Congress of the International Statistical Institute, ISI 2011 (2011)
Marsh, C., Skinner, C., Arber, S., Penhale, B., Openshaw, S., Hobcraft, J., Lievesley, D., Walford, N.: The case for samples of anonymized records from the 1991 census. J. Roy. Stat. Soc. Ser. A 154, 305–340 (1991)
Office of the Australian Information Commissioner: Annual report 2012-13
Office of the Australian Information Commissioner: Community attitudes to privacy survey (2013)
O’Keefe, C., Connolly, C.: Privacy and the use of health data for research. Med. J. Aust. 193, 537–541 (2010)
O’Keefe, C., Westcott, M., Ickowicz, A., O’Sullivan, M., Churches, T.: Protecting confidentiality in statistical analysis outputs from a virtual data centre. Working Paper, Joint UNECE/Eurostat Work Session on Statistical Data Confidentiality, Ottawa, Canada, October 29-30, 10 p. (2013), http://www.unece.org/stats/documents/2013.10.confidentiality.html
Population Health Research Network: website
Sax Institute: Secure Unified Research Environment (SURE). Website, www.sure.org.au
Sax Institute: 45 and up (website), https://www.saxinstitute.org.au/our-work/45-up-study/
Thompson, G., Broadfoot, S., Elazar, D.: Methodology for automatic confidentialisation of statistical outputs from remote servers at the Australian bureau of statistics. Joint UNECE/Eurostat Work Session on Statistical Data Confidentiality, Ottawa, Canada, October 28-30, 37 p. (2013)
UK Data Archive: Secure data service (website), securedata.data-archive.ac.uk
University of Chicago: NORC (website), www.norc.org
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2014 Springer International Publishing Switzerland
About this paper
Cite this paper
O’Keefe, C.M., Gould, P., Churches, T. (2014). Comparison of Two Remote Access Systems Recently Developed and Implemented in Australia. In: Domingo-Ferrer, J. (eds) Privacy in Statistical Databases. PSD 2014. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 8744. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-11257-2_23
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-11257-2_23
Publisher Name: Springer, Cham
Print ISBN: 978-3-319-11256-5
Online ISBN: 978-3-319-11257-2
eBook Packages: Computer ScienceComputer Science (R0)