Privacy policy
In order to comply with data protection legislation, this notice has been designed to inform you of what you need to know about the personal information we process. This is your assurance that we are complying with our legal obligation to you and a good opportunity for you to understand or exercise your information rights.
We are legally required to tell you:
What personal information we use
Why we need your personal information
The lawful basis for processing your personal information i.e. legitimate reasons for collecting, keeping, using and sharing it
How we use, store, protect and dispose of your personal information
How long we keep it for and who we may share it with
About your information rights
How to report a complaint or concern
Your Personal Information
When we say personal information, we are referring to any information that can identify a specific person, either on its own or together with other information. The obvious examples are name, address and date of birth; however, this could include other forms for data, such as email address, car registration, specific physical feature, NHS number, pictures, images and so forth.
Most of the personal information we process is confidential or sensitive because of the nature of our business activities (health and social care). This could be used in a discriminatory way and is likely to be of a private nature, so greater care is needed to ensure this is processed securely. Confidential or sensitive information includes the racial or ethnic origin of the data subject, political opinions, religious beliefs or other beliefs of a similar nature, Trade Union membership, physical or mental health or condition, sexual life, commission, alleged commission of or proceeding for any offence.
Anonymised data is not personal information. This is any information that cannot reasonably identify you, so it cannot be personal, confidential or sensitive. Anonymisation requires the removal of personal information that might identify you. This process allows personal information to be converted.
The personal information we collect may be used for any of the following specific purposes:
Health care for patients – diagnosis, treatment and referral
Accounting, financial management and auditing
Education and training
Consultancy and Advisory services
Human resources and staff administration
Recruitment candidate management
Crime prevention and prosecution
Health administration and services management
Business activity information and databank administration
Contractual arrangements for data processing by third parties
Occupational Health referrals
Research, national surveys
Security services e.g CCTV monitoring, confidentiality audits
Without your personal information, we cannot:
Ensure we have accurate and up to date information to assess and provide what you require
Provide the appropriate level of assistance or adequate guidance
Refer you to a specialist or another service
Protect the general public or promote public health
Manage, develop or improve our services
Investigate complaints or proceed with legal actions for claims
Employ you to join our workforce
Procure products and services
Commission business activities
Comply with a court order
Comply with regulatory requirements
Meet some of our legal obligations
Compile statistics to review our performance
Educate and train our workforce
Undertake clinical trials and research studies you have consented to
Complete occupational health checks you have consented to
Keep you and other service users safe on our premises
Lawful Basis for Processing your Personal Information
We do not rely on consent to use your personal information as a ‘lawful basis for processing’ regarding using your information for healthcare instead follow guidance issued by the British Medical Association (BMA).
We rely on the following specific provisions under Articles 6 (Lawful Processing) and 9 (Processing of Special Categories of Personal Data) of the GDPR:
For your personal information
Article 6 (1c) ‘processing is necessary for compliance with a legal obligation…’ Article 6 (1e) ‘…a task carried out in the public interest or in the exercise of official authority vested in the controller.’
For your special category information
Article 9 (2b) ‘…for the purposes of carrying out the obligations and exercising specific rights of the controller or of the data subject in the field of employment and social security and social protection law…’ Article 9 (2h) ‘processing is necessary for the purposes of preventive or occupational medicine, for the assessment of the working capacity of the employee, medical diagnosis, the provision of health or social care or treatment or the management of health or social care systems and services…’ Article 9 (2i) ‘processing is necessary for reasons of public interest in the area of public health, such as protecting against serious cross-border threats to health or ensuring high standards of quality and safety of health care and of medicinal products or medical devices…’
Please note: You do have the right to say ‘NO’ to our use of your personal information but this may have an impact on our ability to provide appropriate care or services. Please speak to a member of the Practice or our Data Protection Officer.
We never use your personal information for advertising, marketing and public relations or insurance purposes without your consent.
Retention and Disposal of Personal Information Your personal information may be written down (manual), digitised or held on computers (electronic) centrally within or outside of the Practice. These may be paper records, scans, photographs, slides, CCTV images, microform (i.e. fiche/film), audio, video, emails, computerised records on IT systems, or scanned documents etc. which we process securely in accordance with data protection legislation and store in conjunction with the Records Management code of Practice. – Records Management Code of Practice 2016
Keeping your Personal Information Safe
We are committed to keeping your information secure and have operational policies, procedures and technical measures in place to protect your information whether it is in a hardcopy, digital or electronic format.
We are registered to the Information Commissioner’s Office. Registration number: ZA208551.
Mandatory training and regular audits are in place to ensure that only authorised personnel with the absolutely necessary need to know your personal information can use it.
When there are data protection breaches (for example – unauthorised access, inappropriate use, failure to secure and keep personal information secure or accurate), these are reported and investigated, with appropriate action (disciplinary, legal, lessons learned, re-training etc.) taken.
Sharing Personal Information
We may need to share your personal information with another organisation e.g. NHS organisations, health and social care organisations, public bodies (Social Services, Probation Service, Police, Regulatory Authorities) or third party providers commissioned to process personal information on our behalf.
This is because of our duty to share which is equally as important as our duty of confidentiality. We may also share your personal information for planning services across the NHS. This is vital to delivering better healthcare and improving our services.
You have the right to say no and to opt out of or restrict this sharing. Your right to opt out for reasons other than direct care (e.g. planning and research purposes) is managed through the National Data Opt-Out Programme (search online or contact NHS Digital on 0300 303 5678 to find out more).
How the NHS and care services use your information
Whenever you use a health or care service, such as attending Accident & Emergency or using Community Care services, important information about you is collected in a patient record for that service. Collecting this information helps to ensure you get the best possible care and treatment.
The information collected about you when you use these services can also be used and provided to other organisations for purposes beyond your individual care, for instance to help with:
improving the quality and standards of care provided
research into the development of new treatments
preventing illness and diseases
monitoring safety
planning services
This may only take place when there is a clear legal basis to use this information. All these uses help to provide better health and care for you, your family and future generations. Confidential patient information about your health and care is only used like this where allowed by law.
Most of the time, anonymised data is used for research and planning so that you cannot be identified in which case your confidential patient information isn’t needed.
You have a choice about whether you want your confidential patient information to be used in this way. If you are happy with this use of information you do not need to do anything. If you do choose to opt out your confidential patient information will still be used to support your individual care.
To find out more or to register your choice to opt out, please visit NHS Your Data Matters. On this web page you will:
See what is meant by confidential patient information
Find examples of when confidential patient information is used for individual care and examples of when it is used for purposes beyond individual care
Find out more about the benefits of sharing data
Understand more about who uses the data
Find out how your data is protected
Be able to access the system to view, set or change your opt-out setting
Find the contact telephone number if you want to know any more or to set/change your opt-out by phone
See the situations where the opt-out will not apply
You can also find out more about how patient information is used at the websites below:
You can change your mind about your choice at any time.
Data being used or shared for purposes beyond individual care does not include your data being shared with insurance companies or used for marketing purposes and data would only be used in this way with your specific agreement.
Health and care organisations have until 2020 to put systems and processes in place so they can be compliant with the national data opt-out and apply your choice to any confidential patient information they use or share for purposes beyond your individual care. Our organisation is compliant with the national data opt-out policy.
Your Information Rights | You have the right to:
Be informed about the processing of your personal information by the Practice (done through this notice)
Access the information we hold about you (paper, digital or electronic copies)
Ask the Practice to correct or complete your personal information
Ask the Practice to erase your personal information under certain circumstances, if the Practice does not have a lawful basis to process it
Ask the Practice to restrict the processing of your personal information under certain circumstances
Ask the Practice to move, copy and transfer your personal information which you have provided to the Practice, in a portable, commonly-used/machine readable format and securely, for your own purpose
Ask us not to process your personal information
Ask us not to use your personal information for public interests, direct marketing, automated decision-making, profiling, research or statistical purposes
Receive a response to your access or change request within a calendar month
Requests for information
Please complete a Request for Access to Records form on our website. We will require proof of identity before we can disclose any personal information.
Report Complaint or Concern
We try to meet the highest standards when processing personal information. You should let us know when we get something wrong.
We employ an independent Data Protection Officer (DPO). The role of our DPO is to examine our information handling practices and ensure we operate within the law.
These services are provided by Steve Durbin. He can be contacted on dpo.ncl@nhs.net. He can only assist with complaints about your personal information.
All other complaints should be directed here.