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HEALTH RECORDS (PRIVACY AND ACCESS) AMENDMENT BILL 2005 (NO 2)
Australian Capital
Territory
HEALTH RECORDS (PRIVACY AND
ACCESS) AMENDMENT BILL 2005 (No
2)
Explanatory
Statement
Circulated
with the authority of
Simon Corbell
MLA
Minister for Health
EXPLANATORY
STATEMENT
Outline
The Health Records (Privacy and access) Amendment
Bill 2005 (No 2) addresses a number of
concerns that have been raised in regards to some aspects of the current Act
that do not work well in practice and some issues that are not covered by the
current Act. The other amendments relate to maintaining consistency with the
National Health Privacy Code.
The Bill amends the
Health Records (Privacy and Access) Act 1997
by:
• Adding a provision to include minimum
periods for retaining health
records;
• Amending section 7 to ensure
access to health records by third parties protects the consumer’s
privacy;
• Amending the Act to allow
access to health records in defined circumstances by families, guardians and
carers of deceased people where the person dies intestate or is legally
incompetent;
• Amending the Act to allow access to health
information by carers in limited circumstances;
and
• Allowing the disclosure of
identifiable data for research purposes in controlled
circumstances.
Revenue/Cost
Implications
There are no additional costs involved with the
Bill.
Clause 1 – Name of Act –
states the title of the Act, which is the Health Records (Privacy and
access) Amendment Bill 2005 (No
2).
Clause 2 – Commencement
– states when the Act commences. The Act will commence on a day fixed
by the Minister by written notice.
Clause 3
– Legislation amended – pt 2 – states that this Act amends
the Health Records (Privacy and Access) Act
1997.
Clause 4 – Section 5 other
than privacy principles – substitutes a new section 5 to accommodate
the move of the privacy principles to schedule 1 of the
Act.
Clause 5 – Section 5, principle 4
– substitutes a new Principle 4 to provide for timeframes for the
destruction of health records (Principle 4.1 section 2 and 3), to require record
keepers to maintain a register of destroyed or transferred records (Principle
4.2) and to require entities other than health service providers to destroy or
permanently deidentify health information if it is no longer needed for the
purpose it was collected.
Clause 6 – Section 5, principle 6 –
substitutes a new Principle 6 to allow a treating health service provider to
disclose personal health information about a consumer if the disclosure is made
for compassionate reasons and the disclosure would be reasonably expected by the
consumer and is not contrary to any wishes previously expressed by the consumer.
These changes will not impinge upon the consumers
right to confidential treatment of health information as provided for in section
17(3) of the Act.
Clause 7 – Section 5, principle 10 –
substitutes a new Principle 10 which apart from updating the language and style
allows for identifiable data to be disclosed for
research purposes under controlled circumstances (Clause 3 and Clause 8), to
allow disclosure to a carer where access is necessary for them to carry out
their functions as carers safely and effectively (Clause 4 and Clause 10), to
allow greater control by the consumer by way of an approved form when third
parties seek access to health records (Clause 7) to allow an immediate family
member access for compassionate reasons to personal health information of a
consumer in situations where such disclosure would have been expected by the
consumer and are not contrary to any wishes expressed by the consumer (Clause
11).
Clause 8 – Section 5 privacy
principles (as amended) – relocates the privacy principles to Schedule
1 of the Act.
Clause 9 – Section 7
– substitutes a new section which apart from updating the language and
style allows greater control by the consumer by
way of an approved form when a consumer consents to the providing of a health
status report.
Clause 10 – Access
otherwise than under pt 3, Section 8(2) (a) – substitutes a new
subparagraph to accommodate the more specific
amendments to the Act that were passed earlier this year to protect the identity
of people making reports under the Children and Young People Act
1999.
Clause 11 – Statement of
principle regarding right of access, Section 10(2) (b) – substitutes a
new subparagraph to accommodate the more specific
amendments to the Act that were passed earlier this year to protect the identity
of people making reports under the Children and Young People Act
1999.
Clause 12 – Section 13
– substitutes a new section which apart from updating the language and
style imposes an obligation on the record keeper to disclose information where
an appropriate consent has been signed by the consumer in accordance with
Schedule 1, Principle 10 clause
2(c).
Clause
13 – Section 14A heading – substitutes a new section heading
consequential on the amendment made below in clause
14.
Clause 14
– Section 14A (a) – substitutes a new section to accommodate
the more specific amendments to the Act that were
passed earlier this year to protect the identity of people making reports under
the Children and Young People Act
1999.
Clause 15 – Section 16
– substitutes a new section which retains the policy intent of the
section but updates the language and style to make the application of the
section clearer and easier to
administer.
Clause
16 – No access to health record where material given in confidence. New
Section 17(4) – inserts a new subsection to make it clear that there
will be no access to a health record even to a legal representative where the
consumer has notified the record keeper that the material provided is
confidential in accordance with section
17.
Clause 17
– New schedule 1 heading – inserts a new heading for schedule 1
consequential on the amendment made in clause 5 above which moves all the
privacy principles from section 5 of the Act to Schedule
1.
Clause 18
– Dictionary, note 2, new dot point – inserts a new dot point to
alert readers to the definition of domestic partner as contained in section 169
of the Legislation Act 2001.
Clause
19 – Dictionary, definition of consumer – substitutes a new
definition for consumer to allow access to health records by an immediate family
member where a consumer dies intestate.
Clause 20 – Dictionary, new
definition of destroy – inserts a new definition for destroy in the
dictionary to make it clear that destroying a health record includes deleting a
health record.
Clause 21 – Dictionary,
definition of guardian – substitutes a new definition for guardian to
include for a young person a person with parental responsibility under section
18 of the Children and Young People Act 1999.
Schedule 1 Other
Amendments
Item 1.1 – Section 4B, note 1 –
substitutes a new note 1 to alert readers that the Criminal Code applies to all
offences against this Act.
Item 1.2 –
Sections 20 to
22 – these
amendments restate the offence provisions in current drafting style and
harmonises the offences in the Act with the Criminal Code.
Item 1.3 – Dictionary, definition of false
representation – has been omitted as
false representation is now stated in the Criminal Code.
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