In early April, 2021 I asked at the local GP in Wales about my 10 year old son’s medical records.
The Physician Associate said it should be fine, but had to check with the Doctor.
He came back and said that, despite both myself and my son being with the surgery for over 10 years and known to all staff, I would need to put it in writing, along with my son’s long form birth certificate.
6th April 2021 I dropped off the letter and form. After some nudging, on the 20th April I received a letter with one single line:
"After careful consideration the practice has decided to decline your Subject Access Request".
There was no name or other explanation, and the signature was unreadable. I called several times and tried to get more clarity, particularly as to why they had chosen to interpret “can I discuss my son’s health” as a subject access request, but was never called back. To be absolutely clear, there is no criminal or family court order or conviction of any kind, or anything that dimishes my PR.
As time passed I became increasingly concerned about my son’s welfare, particularly his rapid weight gain, total isolation from friends by his mother etc, and on the 24th May, I wrote back reminding them of the NHS guidelines and GMC section 55
I also explained in brief that I was very concerned about my son’s wellbeing and welfare.
On the 27th May 2021, the practice manager emailed me back:
Thank you for your e-mail of the 24th May. I have taken note of your comments and will look into the matter further and furnish you with further information as soon as possible.
On 3rd June, I called and was told someone would call me back.
On 7th June, I called again, and said that if no-one would answer my question or provide an explanation, that I would like copy of their complaints procedure.
On 9th June I received an email, and again, no name was given:
This is just to confirm we have received your e-mail and as has been previously stated to you we are seeking advice. When we have done so we will be in a position to advise you further. We are not sure how long this will take but can assure you we will contact you as soon as possible and in a reasonable timescale.
On the morning of the 11th of June, I phoned the local Health Teaching Board which oversees the practice.
On the morning of 12th June, I received a copy of their complaints form, and the following letter, dated 11th June.
OK, that needs some serious unpacking - there are a number or non-sequiturs and unrelated clauses on those long run-on sentences.
We accept that you have parental responsibility and have a right to request information about your son, but that does not equate to a right to be given information, as regardless of his age that information relates to him, and his interests are paramount.
That's utter nonsense. So, if a 3 year old got a terrible disease the doctor wouldn't be able to discuss it with the parent?? A right to ask for the information is surely a right to have that information!
"We have a duty of confidentiality to all patients."
He's my son. He's 10.
"In the case of children we would not disclose information about them in the absence of their consent if they have capacity to provide this,"
So? Does he have the capacity or not? Was his consent sought? If so, why, when it has not previously been needed?
"regardless of how old they are, or if the disclosure of that information may go against their best interests."
Again, he's 10. And why would the disclosure of that information go against my son's interest?
I am beyond furious about this and I’m not willing to faff around with further drawn out complaint procedures. My son’s health is of immediate concern. So far, all I have is suggestions of:
OR is there someone here who can draft a strong letter? Or what should I expect to pay to have a short letter written by a solicitor?
I need to move hard and fast on this. I’m not mucking about here.
Thanks
The Physician Associate said it should be fine, but had to check with the Doctor.
He came back and said that, despite both myself and my son being with the surgery for over 10 years and known to all staff, I would need to put it in writing, along with my son’s long form birth certificate.
6th April 2021 I dropped off the letter and form. After some nudging, on the 20th April I received a letter with one single line:
"After careful consideration the practice has decided to decline your Subject Access Request".
There was no name or other explanation, and the signature was unreadable. I called several times and tried to get more clarity, particularly as to why they had chosen to interpret “can I discuss my son’s health” as a subject access request, but was never called back. To be absolutely clear, there is no criminal or family court order or conviction of any kind, or anything that dimishes my PR.
As time passed I became increasingly concerned about my son’s welfare, particularly his rapid weight gain, total isolation from friends by his mother etc, and on the 24th May, I wrote back reminding them of the NHS guidelines and GMC section 55
https://www.gmc-uk.org/ethical-guida...people-parents
55. Divorce or separation does not affect parental responsibility and you should allow both parents reasonable access to their children's health records.
https://www.medicalprotection.org/uk...d-young-people
https://www.themdu.com/guidance-and-...-are-separated
https://www.nhs.uk/common-health-que...health-records
A person with parental responsibility will usually be entitled to access the records of a child who is aged 12 or younger.
55. Divorce or separation does not affect parental responsibility and you should allow both parents reasonable access to their children's health records.
https://www.medicalprotection.org/uk...d-young-people
https://www.themdu.com/guidance-and-...-are-separated
https://www.nhs.uk/common-health-que...health-records
A person with parental responsibility will usually be entitled to access the records of a child who is aged 12 or younger.
On the 27th May 2021, the practice manager emailed me back:
Thank you for your e-mail of the 24th May. I have taken note of your comments and will look into the matter further and furnish you with further information as soon as possible.
On 3rd June, I called and was told someone would call me back.
On 7th June, I called again, and said that if no-one would answer my question or provide an explanation, that I would like copy of their complaints procedure.
On 9th June I received an email, and again, no name was given:
This is just to confirm we have received your e-mail and as has been previously stated to you we are seeking advice. When we have done so we will be in a position to advise you further. We are not sure how long this will take but can assure you we will contact you as soon as possible and in a reasonable timescale.
On the morning of the 11th of June, I phoned the local Health Teaching Board which oversees the practice.
On the morning of 12th June, I received a copy of their complaints form, and the following letter, dated 11th June.
We are sorry that you are unhappy with the decision to not comply with your request for information about you son. We accept that you have parental responsibility and have a right to request information about your son, but that does not equate to a right to be given information, as regardless of his age that information relates to him, and his interests are paramount.
We can reassure you that we have considered both our professional obligations under GMC guidance, and the guidance that relates to disclosure of medical records under the Data protection Act, and also taken advice about our interpretation of the guidance. We have a duty of confidentiality to all patients.
In the case of children we would not disclose information about them in the absence of their consent if they have capacity to provide this, regardless of how old they are, or if the disclosure of that information may go against their best interests. Taking these factors into our account, it is our decision that it would not be appropriate to comply with your request, but unfortunately for confidentiality reasons we cannot provide more specific details for either our initial decision, or this review of the decision.
We can reassure you that we have considered both our professional obligations under GMC guidance, and the guidance that relates to disclosure of medical records under the Data protection Act, and also taken advice about our interpretation of the guidance. We have a duty of confidentiality to all patients.
In the case of children we would not disclose information about them in the absence of their consent if they have capacity to provide this, regardless of how old they are, or if the disclosure of that information may go against their best interests. Taking these factors into our account, it is our decision that it would not be appropriate to comply with your request, but unfortunately for confidentiality reasons we cannot provide more specific details for either our initial decision, or this review of the decision.
We accept that you have parental responsibility and have a right to request information about your son, but that does not equate to a right to be given information, as regardless of his age that information relates to him, and his interests are paramount.
That's utter nonsense. So, if a 3 year old got a terrible disease the doctor wouldn't be able to discuss it with the parent?? A right to ask for the information is surely a right to have that information!
"We have a duty of confidentiality to all patients."
He's my son. He's 10.
"In the case of children we would not disclose information about them in the absence of their consent if they have capacity to provide this,"
So? Does he have the capacity or not? Was his consent sought? If so, why, when it has not previously been needed?
"regardless of how old they are, or if the disclosure of that information may go against their best interests."
Again, he's 10. And why would the disclosure of that information go against my son's interest?
I am beyond furious about this and I’m not willing to faff around with further drawn out complaint procedures. My son’s health is of immediate concern. So far, all I have is suggestions of:
- Community health council
- Local MP
- A call to the GMC?
OR is there someone here who can draft a strong letter? Or what should I expect to pay to have a short letter written by a solicitor?
I need to move hard and fast on this. I’m not mucking about here.
Thanks
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