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SeRP UK

SeRP UK is operated as a private research cloud and is operated as a multi-tenancy model which means you control how and who uses it all under one pricing structure. It lets you build economies of scale and offers a cost effective data management and governance environment for users whilst also enabling them to be part of the SeRP UK research community. 

SeRP UK is accredited to the ISO270001 information security standard and to the UK Statistics Authority under the Digital Economy Act 2017. SeRP UK is used by many research organisations across the UK to host research data within a secure research environment enabling collaborative research.

 

SeRP UK is the perfect solution for any organisation that has accumulated a large amount of data, that intends to share that data for the purposes of research and long term benefit to society, and that wants to do so in the most secure and safe way possible to reduce associated risks.

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“We have partnered with (SeRP) because their experience in health data security is the best in the world. Monash University is committed to guaranteeing data security.”

Professor Ian Smith, Vice-Provost (Research and Research Infrastructure), Monash University, Australia

“SeRP offered an additional added value to the CRIS Programme over and above our current hosting provider… specifically their SeRP Platform-as-a-Service”

Mike Denis, Chief Executive Officer, Akrivia Health

"The establishment of Dementia Platform Australia (DPAU), led by The Centre for Healthy Brain Ageing at UNSW Sydney, has benefited from the existing SeRP instance at Monash University, Australia. Utilising an established SeRP instance has facilitated a relatively straight forward implementation of DPAU. SeRP is a trusted and proven technology and DPAU is confident that SeRP is the optimal solution for our data sharing platform."

Vibeke S. Catts, PhD, Research Manager, Centre for Healthy Brain Ageing (CHeBA)

"SeRP data security was perfect, very important for Genes & Health - a data breach is our number one risk and would lose the confidence of our volunteers and researchers"

Professor David van Heel, Professor of Genetics at Queen Mary University of London and Chief Investigator at East London Genes & Health