Privacy and data usage in the age of artificial intelligence are colliding in healthcare where maintaining trust is as essential as advancing patient care. Secure encryption technologies and regulatory guidance can help to ensure health systems get a handle on protecting the patient data they store and use. Rina Shainski and Dr.

Kurt Rohloff, cofounders at Duality, say privacy-enhancing technologies like the ones their company develops offer practical protections for healthcare organizations seeking to analyze sensitive data while maintaining patient privacy now. Privacy protection approaches such as fully homomorphic encryption (FHE), trusted execution environments (TEEs) and privacy-preserving federated learning (PPFL) are hugely valuable, but still underused, say Shainski, who serves as Duality's chairwoman, and Rohloff, the company's chief technical officer. They spoke with Healthcare IT News recently to discuss how FHE, TEEs and PPFL can help address the healthcare sector's increasing and significant patient data protection challenges and can benefit regulatory guidance that must evolve.

Driving encryption forward Duality has developed software-based capabilities to share highly protected data. Rohloff personally helped to implement one of the first homomorphic encryption schemes, enabling applied privacy-protected data collaboration, under the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. "With FHE – which allows not just protection at rest and protection in transit, whi.