Privacy Notice

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  • Leeds GP Practice Privacy Notice

    Contents

    Who we are and what we do. 3

    The name and contact details of our organisation. 3

    The contact details of our data protection officer. 3

    What we do. 3

    Our Commitment to Data Privacy and Confidentiality. 3

    The categories of personal data we hold and the sources we obtain them from… 4

    How we use your personal data (the purposes of processing). 5

    For provision of direct care: 5

    Primary Care Networks. 5

    For commissioning and healthcare planning purposes: 5

    For research purposes: 6

    For safeguarding purposes, life or death situations or other circumstances when we are required to share information: 6

    When you request to see your information or ask us to share it with someone else: 6

    The lawful basis for the processing. 7

    Provision of direct care and related administrative purposes. 7

    For commissioning and healthcare planning purposes. 7

    For planning and running the NHS (other mandatory flow). 7

    For planning & running the NHS – national clinical audits. 7

    For research. 7

    For safeguarding or other legal duties. 8

    When you request us to share your information e.g., subject access requests. 8

    The recipients and categories of recipients of personal data. 8

    The details of transfers of the personal data to any third countries or international organisations. 8

    Retention periods for your personal data. 9

    The rights available to you in respect of data processing. 9

    Right to be informed. 9

    The right of access. 9

    The right to rectification. 9

    The right to erasure. 9

    The right to restrict processing. 10

    The right to object 10

    Rights in relation to automated decision making and profiling. 10

    The right to data portability. 10

    The right to withdraw consent 10

    The right to lodge a complaint with a supervisory authority. 11

     

    Who we are and what we do Burley Park Medical Centre was opened in June 1988 and is owned and run by the doctors of the practice. The practice consists of doctors, nurses, reception and administration staff and allied health care workers and looks after over 13 000 patients. We offer a wide range of health care services to the local community in purpose built premises. We aim to provide a friendly, patient focused, high quality level of care to our diverse group of patientsThe name and contact details of our organisation.

    Name: Burley Park Medical Centre

    Address: 273 Burley Road, Leeds, LS4 2EL

    The contact details of our data protection officer

    Our Data Protection Officer is Leeds ICB and they can be contacted on: 0113 8435470

    What we do

    As a GP practice we are responsible for your day to day medical care and the purpose of this notice is to inform you of the type of information that we hold about you, how that information is used for your care, our legal basis for using the information, who we share this information with and how we keep it secure and confidential.

    It covers information we collect directly from you (that you have either provided to us, or from consultations with staff members), or we collect from other organisations who manage your care (such as hospitals or community services).

    We are required by law to maintain records about your health and treatment, or the care you have received within any NHS service.

    Our Commitment to Data Privacy and Confidentiality

    As a Practice, we are committed to protecting your privacy and will only process data in accordance with the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), the Data Protection Act 2018, the Common Law Duty of Confidentiality, professional codes of practice, the Human Rights Act 1998 and other appropriate legislation.

    Everyone working for the Practice has a legal and contractual duty to keep information about you confidential. All our staff receive appropriate and ongoing training to ensure that they are aware of their personal responsibilities and their obligations to uphold confidentiality.

     

    Staff are trained to ensure how to recognise and report any incident and the organisation has procedures for investigating, managing and learning lessons from any incidents that occur.

     

     

     

    All identifiable information that we hold about you in an electronic format will be held securely and confidentially in secure hosted servers that pass stringent security standards.

     

    Any companies or organisations we use we may use to process your data are also legally and contractually bound to operate under the same security and confidentiality requirements.

     

    All identifiable information we hold about you within paper records is kept securely and confidentially in lockable cabinets with access restricted to appropriately authorised staff.

     

    As an organisation we are required to provide annual evidence of our compliance with all applicable laws, regulations and standards through the Data Security and Protection toolkit.

     

    Your information will not be sent outside of the United Kingdom where the laws do not protect your privacy to the same extent as the law in the UK. We will never sell any information about you.

     

    In addition to our Data Protection Officer, we also have a senior person within the practice who is responsible for protecting the confidentiality of our records and ensuring that any use of your data is fair and appropriate- this person is the Caldicott Guardian. The Caldicott Guardian for the practice is: Dr. Neil Lawton

    The practice is registered with the Information Commissioners Office as a Data Controller- our registration number is: Z5355613 and you can view our registration here

    https://ico.org.uk/ESDWebPages/Entry/Z5355613

    We will endeavour to maintain our duty of confidentiality to you at all times and will only share data about you if we genuinely believe that it would improve the care we provide for you.

    Other than for the purposes of direct care or indirect care (such as healthcare planning), we will only share your information without your permission when we are required to do so under exceptional circumstances (such as a serious risk to yourself and others) or if it is required by law.

     

    The categories of personal data we hold and the sources we obtain them from

    • Details about you, such as your name, address, carers, biological gender, gender identity, ethnic origin, date of birth, legal representatives and emergency contact details are collected from you when you register with the practice via the GMS1 form and new patient questionnaire you fill in when your register.
    • Information that you provide about your health when you consult with healthcare professionals at the practice, which will be recorded in your notes

     

     

    • Any contact the surgery has with you, such as appointments, clinic visits, emergency appointments, etc. are recorded on our clinical system

     

     

    • Results of investigations such as laboratory tests, x-rays, etc. which are sent to the practice electronically from hospitals

     

    • Any consultations you may have had with “extended access” hubs, which the practice is part of.

     

    • We are routinely informed of any A&E visits or outpatient appointments at local hospitals

     

    • We are routinely advised of any contact with out of hours providers or NHS111

     

    • We are hold details of any other relevant information from other health professionals, relatives or those who care for you. All information flows within the practice are routinely mapped as part of our GDPR compliance and compliance with the Data Security and Protection toolkit.

     

    How we use your personal data (the purposes of processing).

    As health professionals, we maintain records about you in order to support your care. By registering with the practice, your existing records will be transferred to us from your previous practice so that we can keep them up to date while you are our patient and if you do not have a previous medical record (a new-born child or coming from overseas, for example), we will create a medical record for you.

    We take great care to ensure that your information is kept securely, that it is up to date, accurate and used appropriately. All of our staff are trained to understand their legal and professional obligations to protect your information and will only look at your information if they need to.

     

    For provision of direct care:

    In the practice, individual staff will only look at what they need in order to carry out such tasks as booking appointments, making referrals, giving health advice or provide you with care.

    Primary Care Networks:

    All practices in the UK are members of a Primary Care Network (PCN), which is a group of practices who have chosen to work together and with local community, mental health, social care, pharmacy, hospital and voluntary services to provide care to their patients.

    PCNs are built on the core of current primary care services and enable greater provision of proactive, personalised, coordinated and more integrated health and social care.

    We are members of Woodsley PCN along with Hyde Park Surgery, Craven Road Medical Practice, Laurel Bank Surgery, Burton Croft Surgery, Kirkstall Lane Medical Centre and Vesper Road Surgery.This arrangement means that practices within the same PCN may share data with other practices within the PCN, for the purpose of patient care (such as extended hours appointments and other services), Each practice within the PCN is part of a stringent data sharing agreement that means that all patient data shared is treated with the same obligations of confidentiality and data security.

     

    Care Quality Commission (CQC)

    All practices have regular visits from CQC where they monitor, inspect and regulate services to make sure they meet fundamental standards of quality and safety and they publish what they find, including performance rating to help people choose care. They may need to access patients medical record or personal data as part of their regulatory process.  You can read their privacy notice for more information https://www.cqc.org.uk/about-us/our-policies/privacy-statement

     

    For commissioning and healthcare planning purposes:

    In some cases, for example when looking at population healthcare needs, some of your data may be shared (usually in such a way that you cannot be identified from it). The following organisations may use data in this way to inform policy or make decisions about general provision of healthcare, either locally or nationally.

     

    In order to comply with its legal obligations we may send data to NHS Digital when directed by the Secretary of State for Health under the Health and Social Care Act 2012.

    This practice contributes to national clinical audits and will send the data which are required by NHS Digital when the law allows. This may include demographic data, such as date of birth, and information about your health which is recorded in coded form, for example, the clinical code for diabetes or high blood pressure.

    For research purposes:

    Research data is usually shared in a way that individual patients are non-identifiable.  Occasionally where research requires identifiable information you may be asked for your explicit consent to participate in specific research projects.  The surgery will always gain your consent before releasing any information for this purpose, unless the research has been granted a specific exemption from the Confidentiality Advisory Group of the Health Research Authority

     

    Where specific information is asked for, such as under the National Diabetes audit, you will be given the choice to opt of the audit.

    For safeguarding purposes, life or death situations or other circumstances when we are required to share information:

    We may also disclose your information to others in exceptional circumstances (i.e. life or death situations) or in accordance with Dame Fiona Caldicott’s information sharing review (Information to share or not to share).

    For example, your information may be shared in the following circumstances:

    • When we have a duty to others e.g. in child protection cases
    • Where we are required by law to share certain information such as the birth of a new baby, infectious diseases that may put you or others at risk or where a Court has decided we must.

     

    Notification to patients for the digitisation of Lloyd George records

    From the 23rd November 2022 Burley Park Medical Centre, in conjunction Leeds and CKW- ICB’s, will be conducting a project to digitise all of our historic paper based patient medical records commonly known as Lloyd George medical records. Digitising these records will enable better utilisation of practice space, increase security as well as making the full patient record easily accessible at the point of care to clinical staff within the practice. On completion of the digitisation process, paper based records will be securely destroyed. The scanning and destruction of the paper records will follow strict data protection guidelines adhered to by the NHS. If you wish to discuss the scheme, please inform the Practice direct either by letter or via e-mail [email protected]

    The NHS Long Term plan published in 2019 requires the digitisation of all primary care paper medical records, commonly known as ‘Lloyd George’ records or ‘A4 medical records’

    Having paper based medical records restricts the use of technology to provide ‘joined up’ services and therefore the current paper records will be transferred to a digital format and then destroyed.

    This will involve the current patient paper medical records being scanned and then entered directly into a patient’s electronic medical record. This work will be completed by a third-party suppliers, Civica and Gateway Bureau Services), whose security standards have been reviewed by IG and the National Commercial and Procurement Team.

    We are required by Data Protection law to provide you with the following information about how we handle your information.

    Data Controller contact details Burley Park Medical Centre

    273 Burley Road

    Leeds

    LS4 2EL

     

    Data Protection Officer contact details Please see page 1 of the privacy notice
    Purpose of the processing Transferring the current paper medical records into patients’ electronic medical records.
    Lawful basis for processing The following provisions of the General Data Protection Regulation permit us to digitise existing paper medical records:

     

    Article 6(1)(e) – ‘processing is necessary…in the exercise of official authority vested in the controller…’’

     

    Article 9(2)(h) – ‘processing is necessary for the purpose of preventative…medicine…the provision of health or social care or treatment or the management of health or social care systems and services…’

    Recipient or categories of recipients of the processed data The paper patient records will be shared with CIVICA, who will scan and digitise the current paper medical records before destroying them.
    Right to access and correction You have the right to access your medical record and have any errors or mistakes corrected. Please speak to a member of staff.
    Retention period GP medical records will be kept in line with the law and national guidance. Information on how long records can be kept can be found within the NHS Records Management Code of Practice 2021 or speak to the Practice. The paper medical records will be destroyed 60 days after they are transferred to an electronic format and written confirmation received from the practice in accordance with national standards

     

    Digitisation of Paper Medical Records – Privacy Notice v1.1

    The practice holds medical records to provide medical treatment and advice and patients have a relationship with a GP in order for them to be provide health and care service to you. We therefore do not require your consent to transfer these papers records to an electronic format.

    Please note that information about your rights covered by Data Protection legislation and the complaints procedure are detailed in the Practice’s Main Privacy Notice

    Details of Supplier:

    CIVICA – Vanguard House, Dewsbury Road, Leeds LS11 5DD

    Gatway Bureau Services Ltd – Unit S, Lockwood Way, Leeds LS11 5TH

    About us | Civica

     

    When you request to see your information or ask us to share it with someone else:

    If you ask us to share your data, often with an insurance company, solicitor, employer or similar third party, we will only do so with your explicit consent. Usually the requesting organisation will ask you to confirm your consent, often in writing or electronically. We check that consent before releasing any data and you can choose to see the information before we send it.

     

    The lawful basis for the processing.

    We are required to tell you the legal basis that is used for the various ways we process and use your data. In order to process your personal data we must specify a lawful basis and if we process any personal  data that is deemed to be “special category” data we must also specify a separate condition for processing special category data.

    The following table sets the main ways your personal data may be used and the corresponding legal basis and category of data. Each purpose is covered in more detail within this notice to explain what these mean in more practical terms.

    Purpose of using personal data Legal basis of processing Special category of data
    Provision of direct care and related administrative purposes

    e.g., Consultations, referrals to hospitals or other care providers

    GDPR Article 6(1)(e) – the performance of a task carried out in the public interest GDPR Article  9(2)(h) – medical diagnosis, the provision of health or social care or treatment or the management of health or social care systems.
    For commissioning and healthcare planning purposes

    e.g., collection of mental health data set via NHS Digital or local

     

    GDPR Article 6(1)(c) – compliance with a legal obligation

     

    GDPR Article 9(2)(h) – medical diagnosis, the provision of health or social care or treatment or the management of health or social care systems.

    Special category 9(2)(i) – public interest in the area of public health

    For planning and running the NHS (other mandatory flow)

    e.g., CQC powers to require information and records

    GDPR Article 6(1)(c) – compliance with a legal obligation (the GP practice)

    Regulation 6(1)(e) – the performance of a task carried out in the public interest (CQC)

    GDPR Article 9(2)(h) – medical diagnosis, the provision of health or social care or treatment or the management of health or social care systems.

    Special category 9(2)(i) – public interest in the area of public health

    For planning & running the NHS – national clinical audits GDPR Article 6(1)(e) – the performance of a task carried out in the public interest GDPR Article 9(2)(h) – medical diagnosis, the provision of health or social care or treatment or the management of health or social care systems.

    Special category 9(2)(i) – public interest in the area of public health

    For research GDPR Article 6(1)(f) – legitimate interests…except where such interests are overridden by the interest or fundamental rights and freedoms of the data subject.

    GDPR Article 6(1)(e) – the performance of a task carried out in the public interest

    GDPR Article 6(1)(a) – explicit consent

    GDPR Article 9(2)(j) – scientific or historical research purposes or statistical purposes
    For safeguarding or other legal duties GDPR Article 6(1)(e) – the performance of a task carried out in the public interest

    Regulation 6(1)(c) – compliance with a legal obligation

    GDPR Article 9(2)(b) – purposes of carrying out the obligations of ..social protection law.
    When you request us to share your information e.g., subject access requests GDPR Article 6(1)(a) – explicit consent GDPR Article 9(1)(a) – explicit consent

    The recipients and categories of recipients of personal data.

    We share information about you with other health professionals where they have a genuine need for it to support your care, as follows.

    Recipient of data Reason or purpose
    Leeds Care Record Primary, secondary or emergency care
    Summary Care Record (SCR) Secondary or emergency care
    Leeds Teaching Hospitals Trust Secondary or emergency care
    ·         Other national providers of health care who you choose to be referred to, in consultation with your healthcare professional Secondary or specialist care
    Leeds & York Partnership Foundation Trust Mental health & learning disability services
    Mid-Yorkshire Hospitals Trust Diabetic eye-screening services
    Leeds Community Healthcare Trust District Nursing and other community services
    NHS National Diabetes Prevention Programme Information and lifestyle education
    Local Care Direct Out of Hours primary care provider
    Leeds City Council Social Care services
    Connect Well/PEP or other similar service Social prescribing
    “One You” Provider of heathy lifestyle services
    Forward Leeds Provider of drug & alcohol services
    Federated GP services and Primary Care Networks Providers of extended access appointments over the telephone and at local hubs and other services

     

    From time to time we may offer you referrals to other providers, specific to your own health needs- in these cases we will discuss the referral with you and advise you that we will be sharing your information (generally by referral) with those organisations.

    The details of transfers of the personal data to any third countries or international organisations.

    As a GP surgery, the only occasions when this would occur would be if you specifically requested this to occur- the practice will never routinely send patient data outside of the UK where the laws do not protect your privacy to the same extent as the law in the UK.

    Retention periods for your personal data.

    As long as you are registered as a patient with the surgery, your paper records are held at the practice along with your GP electronic record. If you register with a new practice, they will initiate the process to transfer your records. The electronic record is transferred to the new practice across a secure NHS data-sharing network and all practices aim to process such transfers within a maximum of 8 working days. The paper records are then transferred which can take longer. Primary Care Services England also look after the records of any patient not currently registered with a practice and the records of anyone who has died.

    Once your records have been forwarded to your new practice (or after your death forwarded to Primary Care Services England), a cached version of your electronic record is retained in the practice and classified as “inactive”. If anyone has a reason to access an inactive record, they are required to formally record that reason and this action is audited regularly to ensure that all access to inactive records is valid and appropriate.  We may access this for clinical audit (measuring performance), serious incident reviews, or statutory report completion (e.g., for HM Coroner).

    A summary of retention periods for medical records can be found on the BMA website

    The rights available to you in respect of data processing.

    Under the GDPR all patients have certain rights in relation to the information which the practice holds about them. Not all of these will rights apply equally, as certain rights are not available depending on situation and the lawful basis used for the processing- for reference these rights may not apply are where the lawful basis we use (as shown in the above table in the section on “lawful bases”) is:

     

    • Processing is necessary for the performance of a task carried out in the exercise of official authority vested in the controller – in these cases the rights of erasure and portability will not apply.
    • Legal Obligation – in these cases the rights of erasure, portability, objection, automated decision making and profiling will not apply.

     

    Right to be informed

    You have the right to be informed of how your data is being used. The propose of this document is to advise you of this right and how your data is being used by the practice

    The right of access

    You have the right of access You have the right to ask us for copies of your personal information- this right always applies. There are some exemptions, which means you may not always receive all the information we process.

    The right to rectification

    You have the right to ask us to rectify information you think is inaccurate. You also have the right to ask us to complete information you think is incomplete. This right always applies.

    The right to erasure

    You have the right to ask us to erase your personal information in certain circumstances- This will not generally apply in the matter of health care data

    The right to restrict processing

    You have the right to ask us to restrict the processing of your information in certain circumstances– You have to right to limit the way in which your data is processed if you are not happy with the way the data has been managed.

    The right to object

    You have the right to object to processing if you disagree with the way in which part of your data is processed you can object to this- please bear in mind that this may affect the medical services we are able to offer you

    Rights in relation to automated decision making and profiling.

    Your rights in relation to automated processing– Sometimes your information may be used to run automated calculations. These can be as simple as calculating your Body Mass Index or ideal weight but they can be more complex and used to calculate your probability of developing certain clinical conditions, and we will discuss these with you if they are a matter of concern.

    Typically, the ones used in the practice may include:

    Qrisk– a cardiovascular risk assessment tool which uses data from your record such as your age, blood pressure, cholesterol levels etc to calculate the probability of you experiencing a cardiovascular event over the next ten years.

    Qdiabetes– a diabetes risk assessment tool  which uses your age, blood pressure, ethnicity data etc to calculate the probability of you developing diabetes.

    CHADS – an assessment tool which calculates the risk of a stroke occurring for patients with atrial Fibrillation

    This is not an exhaustive list- other tools may be used depending on your personal circumstances and health needs, however whenever we use these profiling tools, we assess the outcome on a case-by-case basis. No decisions about individual care are made solely on the outcomes of these tools, they are only used to help us us assess your possible future health and care needs with you and we will discuss these with you.

    The right to data portability

    Your right to data portability This only applies to information you have given us- you have the right to ask that we transfer the information you gave us from one organisation to another, or give it to you. The right only applies if we are processing information based on your consent or under a contract, and the processing is automated, so will only apply in very limited circumstances

    The right to withdraw consent

    Because under the provisions of Data Protection Law most of the data processing activities carried out by the practice are not done under the “lawful basis” of consent you cannot withdraw consent as such, however if you are not happy with the way your data is being processed you do have the right to object and the right to ask us to restrict processing.

    There is a new national opt-out that allows people to opt out of their confidential patient information being used for certain reasons other than their individual care and treatment. The system offers patients and the public the opportunity to make an informed choice about whether they wish their personally identifiable data to be used just for their individual care and treatment or also used for research and planning purposes. Details of the national patient opt out can be found online.

     

    In the past, you may have already chosen to prevent your identifiable data leaving NHS Digital, known as a Type 2 opt-out. All existing Type 2 opt-outs will be converted to the new national data opt-out and this will be confirmed by a letter to all individuals aged 13 or over with an existing Type 2 objection in place. Once the national data opt-out is launched, it will no longer be possible to change preferences via local GP practices.

    The right to lodge a complaint with a supervisory authority.

    If you are happy for your information to be used, and where necessary shared, for the purposes described in this notice then you do not need to do anything.

    Should you have any concerns about how your information is managed at the practice, please contact us.

    If you are still unhappy following a review by the GP practice, you can then complain to the Information Commissioners Office (ICO) via:

    • Their website: ico.org.uk
    • Email: [email protected]
    • Telephone: 0303 123 1113 (local rate) or 01625 545 745
    • Or by mail: The Information Commissioner

    Wycliffe House

    Water lane

    Wilmslow

    Cheshire

    SK9 5AF