TLA
  • Twitter
  • GitHub
  • Home
  • TPS
  • BPLP

Insights

  • Point of Care: Interstate Licensing
  • Best Practices for Securing Data
  • Accelerating Tech Innovation
  • Point of Care: Telehealth + Critical Care
  • Maximize Impact, But Do No Harm
  • Infrastructure in a Disaster
  • The Critical Question for Data Science
  • Data Science Could Help Battle Wildfires
  • An EOC in Your Pocket
  • NETCCN Deployed Hospitals

Best Practices

  • Best Practices Articles

Learning Materials

  • APRED
  • Tele-Critical Care Hospitals Map
  • Other Resources

Articles

  • TCC Strategies for Covid-19
  • Tele-ICUs for Covid-19
  • Ventilator Stockpile for Covid-19
  • Cost-Effective ICU Telemedicine
  • Business Case for Tele-ICUs
  • Efficacy of Remote Critical Care

External Blogs

  • CDC COVID-19 News
  • Federal Telemedicine News
  • Public Health Emergency / ASPR Blog
  • The Digital Responder

Valuing Privacy in Humanitarian Response

Humanitarian aid workers are increasingly challenged in their use of data collection in order to accomplish their development and crisis response objectives. The unending growth of mobile devices, the ubiquity of connectivity in even the most remote corners of the world, and the trend towards digitization means that aid agencies are dealing with an []

🗓 Posted November 21, 2017 by rbharani


Read the full article at https://thedigitalresponder.wordpress.com/2017/11/21/valuing-privacy-in-humanitarian-response/

Edit this page on GitHub

← The GDPR is a unique opportunity to get humanitarian data protection right.
On Emergencies, Wifi, Gender and Social Dynamics →
  • Powered by Crisis Technologies Innovation Lab at Indiana University
  • Home
  • Privacy
  • Contact