Search
Browse the Ada Lovelace Institute website.
Filter by:
Active filters:
Vaccine passports and COVID-19 status apps: launching an evidence review and expert deliberation
An evidence review and expert deliberation chaired by Professor Sir Jonathan Montgomery
Governments must offer clarity on vaccine passports
Why it's essential to explore the evidence, risks and benefits of vaccine passports and COVID status apps before any potential roll out
Learning data lessons: data access and sharing during COVID-19
Findings from an expert workshop exploring lessons learned from data-driven initiatives that emerged in response to COVID-19.
Living online: the long-term impact on wellbeing
The Ada Lovelace Institute and Health Foundation’s response to the House of Lords COVID-19 Committee’s call for evidence
Tackling health and social inequalities in data-driven systems
Research to examine the interaction between data-driven systems and health and social inequalities, in the wake of COVID-19.
Boundaries of health data
Exploring how the datafication of health occurs and what consequences it has for people and society.
Health datafication, digital phenotyping and the ‘Internet of Health’
A new report from the Ada Lovelace Institute explores the datafication of health, how it manifests and the consequences for people and society.
The data will see you now
Exploring the datafication of health: what it is, how it occurs, and its impacts on individual and social wellbeing
Can digital immunity certificates be introduced in a non-discriminatory way?
New forms of technology are coming. How do we ensure they’re deployed in a way that conforms to equality regulation?
The NHS COVID-19 app: is it an enduring public health technology?
Will the long-awaited contract tracing app deliver on its promises for 2020 and beyond?
Confidence in a crisis?
Findings of a public online deliberation project on attitudes to the use of COVID-19 related technologies for transitioning out of lockdown
Public health identities in the private sector
The third in our series of events addressing the nascent ‘public health identity’ systems developing around the world