The EU has recently enhanced the potential of health data in the EU digital market by promoting a number of initiatives
and new regulations to facilitate data sharing and re-use among public institutions: the forthcoming provisions of the
Digital Strategy Corpus of law. These, in combination with pre-existing rules and practices of health data exploitation,
might sharpen the risks for citizens, for example allowing public bodies to exploit big data sets - to make detrimental
decisions regarding the access of certain patients to health care (e.g., in the case of insurance-based systems). In this
context, academic analysisis urgently needed, as well assuggesting a revision of the new regulationsto EU policy-makers
to facilitate responsible data sharing. DataCom aims at building a new framework to facilitate an ethical secondary use of
health data held by public bodies, with the aim of improving accountability and enhancing responsible re-use. To build
it, I will develop and test in intersectoral practical environments the innovative concept of “Ethical Commodification”:
the possibility of exploiting personal data in an ethical way for the public good, in accordance with the data subject’s
expectations and needs and taking into account the risks associated with the exploitation of anonymized data sets,
focusing on 3 Member States, Italy, Spain, and the Netherlands. In order to reach this objective, DataCom has a strong
interdisciplinary and intersectoral approach, bridging law, ethics, and computer science, taking into consideration the
needs of the public sector and those of citizens. To ensure the successful implementation of these project goals I will
conduct my research at the University of Turin's Law Department, with the guidance of Prof. Ugo Pagallo, a leading
scholar. This project will prepare me to become a tenured scholar and obtain advanced funding, strengthening my
academic profile and allowing me to establish my own research group.