Records system could be bad medicine

You reported on May 31 that a computerised £280,000 NHS patient records system is to be introduced in Sandwell.

This was portrayed as a very positive step.

But is it?

This is a similar system to the proposed and delayed national NHS database and has the  same inherent problems.

An unknown number of NHS officials and government bureaucrats  will have access to your medical records and also your name, address, GP details and phone numbers.

You can only have them hidden in special circumstances if the police or social services request it if, for example, you are a celebrity or on a witness protection scheme.

Many public and private sector workers will have access to your address and phone numbers, from social workers to pharmacists.

This is fine if you agree to it but there does not appear to be any facility for opting out of the scheme.

The same problems of security and confidentiality are present as in the ID card database.

This government doesn’t seem to have mastered encryption and other basic IT security techniques.

How can we trust Sandwell and West Birmingham NHS trust to be any more advanced? It is only recently that the details of 25 million people were calmly placed on a CD and  lost.

Some people  will be very worried about the confidentiality of their health records and  yet another erosion of  their civil liberties.

It is the policy of the doctors’ own professional organisation (the British Medical Association) that patients should give their individual consent prior to their information being transferred to the national database.

I shall be writing to my GP asking for my details not to be entered on the Sandwell database.

I will do this because at a later date, this will no doubt be transferred to the national database,  again without permission.

The traditional GP surgery will close and impersonal polyclinics will open without your permission.

Why not ‘scupper’ the scheme by writing to your GP and registering your refusal to have your records uploaded.

Those who wish to know more about the choices available should visit   www.thebigoptout.org  or ring 01494 882458.

Gill Chant, Grove Hill Road, Handsworth, Birmingham.

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3 Comments

  1. jo said:

    Welcome to George Orwell’s nightmare.
    Opt out while you can.

  2. chris said:

    absolutelly agree jo,trouble is any one can gain access to anyones details if they have alittle know how. It’s all available on credit checks and insurance details. How do you think you get mail from insurance companies just as your insurance runs out. There is one massive data base out there and loads of people have access and can get access to it Freedom of information and data protection acts are a joke. The NHS data base is nowt to worry about cos in a world where information can be accessed on any web site if you know how it aint worth the worry,the government knows everything about us including our shoe sizes and it aint gonna change.

  3. chris said:

    Don’t panic Jill you have no control over what other people can do with our records. You wouldn’t even know if your records were given to your next door neighbour to read. It won’t be long before all our DNA records are available for all to see and we all carry that info on us in the form of an ID card. As my comments above state we are all electronically tagged now computers are at the forefront of most Data Bases. Big brother knows everything and will continue to know as will anyone else who wants the information including all the junk mail companies who already know us ( and yet we didn’t tell these junk mailers anything about us,wonder where they our names and addresses from eh?)

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