What data are we talking about here?
Quite a bit. It falls broadly under three headings:

Data about the person

Data about their health and wellbeing

Data about their home.
You are now in the Data Zone. For more detail, please explore the links below. Otherwise move on to what GDPR actually says.
Categories of information
Use cases
The following slides offer a visual representation of the kind of data under discussion, the organisations that may hold it, and the situations where it might be needed. They're not currently suitable for users of assistive technology or mobile devices; my apologies for this, and while I try to resolve the problem, please use the links above for an accessible list of the data and when it might be necessary or useful, and for more details about the data elements we're looking at.

Please navigate through the slides using the arrows on the left and right of the images, not the arrows at the bottom of the screen!

This shows the services which may hold some or all of the data indicated. Some of these are indicators of the factors listed on the previous slide rather than data explicitly about those factors, e.g. an assisted bin collection indicates that someone in the home may have mobility needs.

All the data shown here is referenced in one or more Prevention of Future Deaths (PFD) reports issued by HM Coroners between September 2023 and September 2024. Much of this information is referenced repeatedly in a wide range of different contexts.

Please navigate through the slides using the arrows on the left and right of the images, not the arrows at the bottom of the screen!