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EDUCATIONHEALTHWORKFORCE
TRANSPARENCY. ACCESS. SECURITYBEHAVIORHEALTHPUBLICSAFETYPUBLICSERVICES1

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2 EP3 Foundation Chair, National Coalition on Healthcare CEO & PresidentFormer CIO HHSChair Stanford Dept. BMDS Chief Education OfficerExec. Director, EHNACChair & CEONADPHFormer Chief Privacy Officer, HHS Chief Compliance OfficerFormer Chief Data Architect, CDCCEO, Webshield Chair, NH-ISACCSO, ETHNA

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EMPOWERING PEOPLE WITH PRIVACY & PERSONALIZATIONEP3 Foundation, a 501(c)3 nonprofit, is a multi-sector community of standards organizations, industry leaders, researchers, and government agencies committed to privacy-preserving data sharing. 177 Park Avenue, Suite 200San Jose, CA 94113www.EP3Foundation.org info@e3pfoundation.orgOur mission is to improve health, education, and wellness by empowering people with privacy and personalization. We believe that new data paradigms, architecture, and technologies offer actionable data. It is possible for individuals and communities to find and aggregate, comprehensive data. New privacy-preserved networks bridge data silos and ensure compliance while also giving people data intelligence to make decisions that improve our health, education, and wellness outcomes.EP3 FOUNDATION3

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PROMISE OF ANALYTICS

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1. RESEARCHWe conduct, facilitate and participate in peer reviewed research. 2. PROGRAMSWe build and support evidence based programs. 3. CREDENTIALSWe establish and facilitate trust criteria, fameworks, and credentials. WHAT WE DO 5

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INTEGRATED NETWORKSMexicoUSACanadaTurkeyIndiaUnited KingdomAustralia6

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○ Provide security and identity credentials to exchange data while protecting privacy and confidentiality ○ Enable an interoperable system that allows information exchanges and supports services and coordination. ○ Provide providers the ability to access allowable information ○ Provide a secure, real-time data system of records accessible across agencies or institutions. EP3 FOUNDATION SMART CITIES HEALTH SERVICESPUBLIC SAFETYEDUCATION 7

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PROTECT PRIVACY & COORDINATE CARE

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OVERCOMES DATA SILOS 9

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PRIVACY-PRESERVED DATA LIQUIDITYAttribute data governance unleashes the value of the cloud to:

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The internet was designed for two-way, global communication in self-healing, decentralized networks. It was never designed for to be private or secure. The EP3 Foundation and our community of industry, policy and compliance leaders create the additional trust- protocols and credentials required to protect data and establish vendor-neutral, trusted networks. TRUST PROTOCOLS “The internet is a design philosophy and architecture expressed in a set of protocols..” Protocols are the rules and standards that allow people to use the network and talk to each other. 11

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UNLOCKDATA SILOSPOPULATION HEALTHIncrease patient and healthcaresystem rights and privacy.Public Data Improving the CommunityGive the right people the right information at the right time to improve health, safety, and education outcomes.Existing, legacy systemsreceive and exchangeprivacy-protected,actionable data.RESEARCHEmpower communitieswith decision intelligence.PUBLIC SAFETYImprove communityoutcomes.

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EDUCATIONBetter use of and increased access to quality, privacy-protected, and comprehensive data. While Protecting Individual PrivacyACTIONABLEDATAEstablish open framework and trust models to unlock data silos and provide real-time, actionable information. New, open frameworks and data architectures support privacy preserving data exchange.PUBLIC HEALTHImprove core public health reporting, Meaningful Use, situation awareness and surveillance.EMERGENCY RESPONSEProvide first responders and clinicians access to lifesaving health information and personalized decision support, and contribute timely information back to public health systems. 13

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We set the rules that automate data governance and comply with policies, licensing, privacy and cybersecurity requirements.Opportunities:● Enable interoperability● Support easy onboarding● Assure trusted environment where privacy and security requirements are maintainedThe TNAP aligns with the 21st Century Cures Act, and addresses the ONC's requirements to provide tfor healthcare stakeholders, including HINs, HIES, ACOS, Data Registers, Lab, Providers, Payers, Vendors, and Suppliers.TRUSTED NETWORK ACCREDITATION PROGRAMFOUNDING MEMBERS14

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GUIDING PRINCIPLES QUALITY DATA MANAGEMENTSAFETY●●●15

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EDUCATIONINDIVIDUALSPUBLICINSTITUTIONSPAYERSPUBLIC HEALTHRESEARCH INSTITUTIONSPARTICIPANTS


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Hancock Privacy Pattern and FrameworkThe Hancock Privacy Pattern provides use-case frameworks to ethical data governance, standards and accreditations for data models that protect privacy, comply with laws, and improve our ability to make choices. The internet is a design philosophy and architecture expressed in protocols. It was not designed to be secure or private. The architecture was designed to keep two-way communication open without a centralized network, even during disasters. Protocols are the rules and standards that ensure we can connect, communicate, and participate. Information and content about our location, device, application, and behaviors are transmitted via data packets. The created while online are combined with the data created by others such as social networks, schools, banks, and governments. These data are shared (duplicated) and used by many types of organizations. How data is used and by whom have life-long implications.21

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LOCATION
BEHAVIORNETWORKDEVICEAPPLICATIONProactiveandReactiveMeasures

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Trust BlockProcess

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FutureProofed DataProtocols
TRUST BLOCK
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CRITERIAENFORCEMENTSCREDENTIALSDESCRIPTIONS COMPLIANCEPAYMENT & LICENSING IDENTITY & CYBERSECURITYINTEROPERABILITYAUTHORIZED RECIPIENTS & PURPOSESPROVENANCERATINGS & REPUTATIONAUDIT & CERTIFICATIONASSESSMENT METHODOLOGIES TRUST AUTHORITIES & GOVERNANCECRITERIACREDENTIALS RESOURCE DESCRIPTIONHow We Do It2020

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The location of connection establishes theregulatory requirements and providescontext for how data can be used bygovernments, industries, schools, healthproviders, financial services and others.oooo

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IP addresses provide geographic information establishing likely income, political and religious affiliation, ethnic background, purchasing power, and others.○○○○○○○23

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IP address, unique device identifiers,digital fingerprints, and other devicefeatures provide information enrichingusers personal habits, identity, interests,and social networks.oooo○○○○○○○○○○○

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Preferred operating systems, personal preferences for entertainment, financial services, business applications, music styles, and preferences.○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○○25

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Our behaviors create profiles of locations,friends, and family.Information includes strong emotionalconnections andfears, our closest friends and humannetworks. What we search for. The peoplethat matter the most to us. Our humannetworks, reading speed, eye patterns,languages, and favorite activities.○○○○○○○○○○○○○○

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MARSALI HANCOCKEP3 Foundation CEO & President 703.678.3848Info@EP3Foundation.org27

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WHAT MEMBERS ARE SAYING.Quotes for illustration purposes only

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EP3 COALITION ORGANIZATIONSTechnical Fellow