GPs’ representatives voted overwhelmingly this week for a system in which patients opt in to any sharing of medical data with third parties—rather than one in which their consent is assumed unless they opt out, the system favoured by the Department of Health. Clinical confidentiality depends on GPs being the prime data holder of their patients’ medical records, said the BMA’s annual conference of local medical committee representatives in London. It also strongly opposed using implied consent as justification for releasing information on named patients.
At least 100,000 non-medical staff in NHS trusts have access to confidential patient records, claim campaigners. Big Brother Watch, who based the figure on 151 responses from trusts, said it demonstrated "slack security". The group says hospital domestics, porters, and IT staff are among those with access to records in some trusts. The Department of Health says the report muddles paper files and the newer electronic systems for which access will be strictly controlled. Big Brother Watch asked every NHS Trust in the UK for the number of their non-medical staff who had access to confidential patient records.