Former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair and former Conservative leader Lord William Hague have jointly proposed the sale of anonymised NHS medical records to advance medical research and fund cutting-edge treatments. Their vision, which aims to position Britain as a world leader in biomedical research, has sparked controversy and debate about privacy and the implications of such a move. Kevin O’Sullivan of TalkTV reacted by highlighting the potential trouble if anonymity cannot be guaranteed.
Tony Blair wants to sell NHS health records to boost medical research. But the hundreds of millions in donations his company receives from medical data plutocrats makes him far from impartial, writes @TomMcTague 👇 https://t.co/4mkr3OqQ5y
GB News presenter @Nigel_Farage lays into war criminal Tony Blair who is rumoured to want to replace @ProfKlausSchwab as head of the @wef. Blair wants a comprehensive database of the vaccinated. NF: "Digitised, so the state knows exactly what our status is. Pure evil." https://t.co/0CA3qMUAO6
“If they can’t guarantee anonymity then they’re in trouble.” Kevin O’Sullivan reacts to Sir Tony Blair and Lord William Hague saying the NHS should sell anonymous medical records to harness a new biomedical “revolution”. @tvkev https://t.co/JzUDSDrKBK
Sell NHS medical records to fund cutting-edge treatments, Sir Tony Blair and Lord Hague say Read more 🔗 https://t.co/7JnJKy0RqY
Selling access to anonymised patient records to fund the NHS and help make Britain world centre for cutting-edge research Blair & Hague's vision will be contentious, but backlash would once have been far bigger. Are Labour inching in this direction? https://t.co/DxtDQbywBB
Former political rivals Tony Blair and Lord William Hague have called for access to medical records to be sold to help develop cutting-edge treatment ✍️: @robglaws https://t.co/CPvGbAHYW5