Audio By Carbonatix
Using popular health apps could mean private information about medical conditions is not kept confidential, researchers warn.
Of 24 health apps in the BMJ study, 19 shared user data with companies, including Facebook, Google and Amazon.
It warns this could then be passed on to other organisations such as credit agencies or used to target advertising.
And data was shared despite developers often claiming they did not collect personally identifiable information.
Users could be easily identified by piecing together data such as their Android phone's unique address, the study says.
"The semi-persistent Android ID will uniquely identify a user within the Google universe, which has considerable scope and ability to aggregate highly diverse information about the user," the research team wrote in the BMJ.
"These apps claim to offer tailored and cost-effective health promotion - but they pose unprecedented risk to consumers' privacy given their ability to collect user data, including sensitive information.
The authors conclude:
- doctors need to warn patients about the threat to their privacy from using such apps
- regulators should consider that loss of privacy is not a fair cost for the use of digital health services
Security expert Prof Alan Woodward, from the University of Surrey, said: "Users still have little understanding of how the data they entrust to these apps is being shared."
Prof Gil McVean, of the Department of Medicine at the University of Oxford, said there was no evidence of wrongdoing but the study showed "how behind-the-scenes sharing of information among a network of tech companies can potentially be used to create a detailed understanding of an individual's health and activity".
Latest Stories
-
Ghanaian journalist wins Prestigious Africa Science Journalism Award
34 seconds -
Ghanaian businesses urged to engage transaction advisors to spur growth and investment
9 minutes -
EPA cautions against entry into abandoned mine sites
29 minutes -
Court clears way for Daddy Lumba’s funeral on Saturday after applicants fail to meet GH¢2m payment deadline
35 minutes -
Cassona reaffirms long-term commitment to transforming healthcare infrastructure across ECOWAS
38 minutes -
Diana Hamilton clears medical bills for new mothers at Mamobi Hospital
40 minutes -
Author Joanna Trollope dies aged 82
44 minutes -
CyberSafe Foundation, Google.org to launch major cybersecurity project to protect millions across Africa
48 minutes -
Economic Fighters League stands in solidarity with unemployed nurses and teachers
50 minutes -
2025 WASSCE Low Performance: The reality and expectations for academic achievement
51 minutes -
Germany accuses Russia of 2024 cyber-attack and disinformation
1 hour -
Car completely destroyed by fire at Shiashie
1 hour -
A-G surcharges former NSA officials Osei Assibey Antwi and Gifty Oware-Mensah; orders refund of GH¢2.4bn
1 hour -
Hospitality industry pushes back against utility tariff hikes
1 hour -
Transport Minister promises strict enforcement of road traffic laws as parliament passes Okada Bill
1 hour
