All News
100,000 can view NHS medical records
April 26, 2010
Data released under the Freedom of Information Act has shown more than
100,000 non-clinical staff working at the NHS can gain access to private
medical records.
Campaign group TaxPayers' Alliance, which put in the request, received
responses back from 140 acute hospital trusts across the UK.
It had asked for information to be provided on the number of staff not
directly involved in the treatment of patients who have access to the
confidential records.
And having analysed the data, the Big Brother Watch group, part of the
TaxPayers' Alliance, believes NHS workers such as porters, IT staff and
hospital administrators can gain access to either paper or online
versions.
Immediate access was defined as staff who could see at least a patient's
name, date of birth and most recent medical history without needing the
consent of the patient or the signature of another member of staff.
Alex Deane, director of Big Brother Watch, said the Government needed to
address the problems as a matter of urgency.
A spokesman for the Department of Health said: "This report is awash
with inaccuracies and manages to claim quite falsely that detailed
medical records will be shared nationally - they won't.
"The authors are also confused, muddling the distinction between paper
files, which allow any member of staff to see confidential information,
and new electronic systems which strictly control access to those
directly involved in a patient's healthcare."
Latest News