BAYHEAD
DENTAL PRACTICE CONFIDENTIALITY POLICY
Compliance
with this policy is a condition of employment for all staff.
At Bayhead Dental Practice the need for the strict confidentiality of
personal information about patients is taken very seriously.
This document sets out our policy for maintaining confidentiality and all
members of the practice team must comply with these safeguards as part of their
contract of employment/contract for services with the practice.
THE IMPORTANCE OF CONFIDENTIALITY
The
relationship between dentist and patient is based on the understanding that any
information revealed by the patient to the dentist will not be divulged without
the patient’s consent. Patients have the right to privacy and it is vital that
they give the dentist full information on their state of health to ensure that
treatment is carried out safely. The
intensely personal nature of health information means that many patients would
be reluctant to provide the dentist with information of they were not sure that
it would not be passed on. If confidentiality is breached, the dentist/dental
hygienist/dental therapist faces investigation by the General Dental Council and
possible erasure from the Dentists Register/Dental Auxiliaries Roll; and may
also face legal action by the patient for damages and, for dentists, prosecution
for breach of the 1998 Data Protection Act.
GENERAL DENTAL COUNCIL
All
staff must follow the General Dental Council’s rules for maintaining patient
confidentiality:
“The
dentist/patient relationship is founded on trust and a dentist should not
disclose to a third party information about a patient acquired in a professional
capacity without the permission of the patient.
To do so may lead to a charge of serious misconduct.
A dentist should be aware that the duty of confidentiality extends to
other members of the dental team…There may, however, be circumstances in which
the public interest outweighs a dentist’s duty of confidentiality and in which
disclosure would be justified…Communications with the patients should not
compromise patient confidentiality. In
the interests of security an confidentiality, for example, it is advisable that
all postal communications to patients are sent in sealed envelopes.”
If
confidentiality is breached, it is the patient’s dentist who is responsible to
the Council. An enrolled dental
hygienist or dental therapist whose act or omission has breached confidentiality
may also be called before the Council.
WHAT
IS PERSONAL INFORMATION?
In
Bayhead Dental Practice personal information held by a dentist about a patient
includes:
·
The patients name, current and
previous addressees, bank account/credit card details, telephone number/e-mail
address and other means of personal identification such as his or her physical
description
·
Information that the individual is
or has been a patient of the practice or attended, cancelled or failed to attend
an appointment on a certain day
·
Information concerning the
patient’s physical, mental or oral health condition
·
Information about the treatment
that is planned, is being or has been provided
·
Information about family members
and personal circumstances supplied by the patient or others
·
The amount that was paid for
treatment, the amount owing or the fact that the patient is a debtor at the
practice.
PRINCIPLES
OF CONFIDENTIALITY
Bayhead
Dental Practice has adopted the following three principles of confidentiality:
Personal
information about the patient:
·
Is confidential in respect of that
patient and to those providing the patient with health care
·
Should only be disclosed to those
who would be unable to provide effective care and treatment without that
information(the need-to-know concept) and
·
Such information should not be
disclosed to third parties without the consent of the patient except in certain
specific circumstances described in this policy.
DISCLOSURES
TO THIRD PARTIES
There
are certain restricted circumstances in which a dentist may decide to disclose
information to a third party or may be require by law.
Responsibility for disclosure rests with the patient’s dentist and
under no circumstances can any other member of staff make a decision to
disclose. A brief summary of the
circumstances is given below.
When
disclosure is in the public interest
There
are certain circumstances where the wider public interest outweighs the rights
of the patient to confidentiality. This
might include cases where disclosure would prevent a serious future risk to the
public or assist in the prevention or prosecution of serious crime.
When
disclosure can be made
There
are circumstances when personal information can be disclosed:
·
Where expressly the Patient has
given consent to the closure
·
Where disclosure is necessary for
the purpose of enabling someone else to provide health care to the patient and
the patient has consented to this sharing of information
·
Where disclosure is required by
statute or is ordered by a court of law
·
Where disclosure is necessary for
a dentist to pursue a bona-fide legal claim against a patient, when disclosure
to a solicitor, court or debt collecting agency may be necessary.
Disclosure
of information necessary in order to provide care and for the functioning of the
NHS
Information
may need to be disclosed to third party organisations to ensure to provision of
care and the proper functioning of the NHS.
In practical terms this type of disclosure means:
·
Transmission of claims/information
to payment authorities such as the Scottish Dental Practice Board.
·
In more limited circumstances,
disclosure of information to the WIHB
·
Referral of the patient to another
dentist or health care provider such as a hospital.
DATA
PROTECTION CODE OF PRACTICE
The
Practice’s Data Protection Code of Practice provides the required procedures
to ensure that we comply with the 1998 Data Protection Act.
It is a condition of engagement that everyone at the practice compiles
with the Code of Practice.
ACCESS
TO RECORDS
Patients
have the right of access to their health records held on paper or on computer.
A request from a patient to see records or for a copy must be referred to
the patient’s dentist. The patient
should be given the opportunity or coming into the practice to discuss the
records and will then be given a photocopy.
Care should be taken to ensure that the individual seeking access is the
patient in question and where necessary the practice will seek information from
the patient to confirm identity. The
copy of the record must be supplied within forty days of the payment of the fee
and receipt of identifying information if this is requested.
Access
may be obtained by making a request in writing and the payment of a fee for
access of £10. We will provide a copy of the record within 40 days of the
request and fee (where payable) and an explanation of your record should it be
required.
The
fact that patients have the right of access to their records makes it essential
that information is properly recorded. Records
must be
·
Contemporaneous and dated
·
Accurate and comprehensive
·
Signed by the dentist
·
Neat, legible and written in ink
·
Strictly necessary for the purpose
·
Not derogatory
·
Be such that disclosure to the
patient would be unproblematic.
PRACTICAL
RULES
The
principles of confidentiality give rise to a number of practice rules that
everyone in Bayhead Dental Practice must observe:
·
Records must be kept secure and in
a location where it is not possible for other patients or individuals to read
them
·
Identifiable information about
patients should not be discusses with anyone outside of the practice including
relatives or friends
·
A school should not be given
information about whether a child attended for an appointment on a particular
day. It should be suggested that the
child is asked to obtain the dentist’s signature on his or her appointment
card to signify attendance
·
Demonstrations of the practice’s
administrative/computer systems should not involve actual patient information
·
When talking to a patient on the
telephone or in person in a public area care should be taken that sensitive
information is not overheard by other patients
·
Do not provide information about a
patient’s appointment record to a patient’s employer
·
Messages about a patient’s care
should not be left with third parties of left on answering machines.
A message to call the practice is all that can be left
·
Recall cards and other personal
information must be sent in an envelope
·
Disclosure of appointment books,
record cards or other information should not be made to police officers or
Inland Revenue officials unless upon the instructions of the dentist
·
Patients should not be able to see
information contained in appointment books, day sheets or computer screens
·
Discussions about patient should
not take place in the practice’s public areas.
DISCIPLINARY
ACTION
If,
after investigation, a member of staff is found to have breached patient
confidentiality or this policy, he or she shall be liable to summary dismissal
in accordance with the practice’s disciplinary policy.
QUERIES
Any
queries about confidentiality see Mr. K. N. MacDonald