Title: MEDICAL CONFIDENTIALITY
1MEDICAL CONFIDENTIALITY
- Dr T Thirumoorthy
- SMA Centre for Medical Ethics and Professionalism
- September 13 2001
2Medical Confidentiality
- Respect for confidentiality is firmly established
in codes of medical ethics - Hippocratic oath
- whatever in connection with my professional
practice, or not in connection with it, I see or
hear in the life of men,which ought not to be
spoken of abroad, I will not divulge as
reckoning that all such should be kept secret
3Medical confidentiality
- International Code of Ethics
- Except when obligated by the law of the country
concerned, a doctor shall not disclose, without
the consent of the patient, information which he
has obtained in the course of his professional
relationship with the patient
4Medical confidentiality
- SMC Physicians Pledge
- I solemnly pledge to
- respect the secrets which are confided
in me
5Medical confidentiality - definitions
- foundation of trust in D-P relationship
- a person puts trust and confidence in another to
act in good faith for his best interest
fiduciary relationship - privileged communication intended only for the
knowledge of a particular person - confidential
communication
6Medical confidentiality - definitions
- Keep private information secret or undisclosed
- children, elderly, mentally disabled and the dead
all have the same right to confidentiality
7Medical confidentiality-why is it important
- natural human desire for privacy
- fear of social embarrassment or disapproval
- fear of discrimination, stigmatisation
- Information misused against patient
8Medical confidentiality-why is it important
- builds confidence and open communication
- demonstrates doctors fidelity to the patient
- respects patients privacy, dignity and
individuality
9Medical confidentiality-why it is important
- Encourages free exchange of information which is
critical for - effective medical intervention
- public health effort
- preventing harm to others
10Medical confidentiality-importance
- Medical confidentiality respects patient autonomy
- right to determine with whom, when and how much
of personal medical information is shared
11Medical confidentialitywhen is it critical
- sexual history STD
- adolescent sexuality
- alcohol drug dependence
- psychiatric conditions
- marginalised persons
12Medical confidentiality-principles of disclosure
- Medical confidentiality is not absolute
- Disclosure -
- to proper authorities- need to know
- not beyond what is required or relevent
- reason for disclosure documented in the
medical records - inform patient that such disclosure is
required -
13Medical confidentiality- disclosure
- with patients consent
- for benefit of patient
- prevent harm to others
- when required by Law
- medical research,audit,registries
14Medical confidentiality- disclosure with
patients consent
- Should be attempted at all times possible
- Patient understands nature effects of disclosure
- Reports to 3rd parties(insurance,employer,) must
always be with consent - written consent - Husband/ wife/ family cannot be implied
15Medical confidentiality-disclosure with
patients consent
- Consent should be written, original , addressed
to a named doctor - Clear indication of reason material
- Informed vs Valid Consent - capacity,voluntary
- Hand document to patient - free to pass on himself
16Medical confidentiality- disclosure for
patients benefit
- In times of emergency
- Patient is incompetent
- Implied consent when care is shared among
professionals - only necessary information for
effective care of patient - For the benefit of patients care
- To prevent harm to patient - epilepsy, child
abuse
17Medical confidentiality-disclosure to prevent
harm to others
- When harm to others outweighs his duty to the
patient - seriousness of harm vs likelihood of occurrence
of harm - to whom to tell how to tell
- disciplinary action against doctor
18Medical confidentiality-disclosure required by
Law
- Order of court - medical litigation,coroners
court, criminal cases, compensation - Drug abuse in Singapore
- Public health risk - Infectious Diseases Act
- Factories (Medical Examinations) Regulations 1985
- Enlistment Act for national service
19Medical confidentiality-disclosure for medical
audit, research,registeries
- approved by ethics committee
- ensure no harm to patient
- delink patients identifiable data
- registries operated under principle of medical
confidentiality - where feasible get consent or inform patient
20Medical confidentiality- medical certificates
- Medical certificates for claiming benefits
- Patients and NOT doctors responsibility to pass
the information - Doctor hands the info to the patient - marked
Private Confidential - Correct diagnosis written after informing patient
the possible implications
21Medical confidentialityethical dilemmas/special
situations
- Company/Managed care
- Occupational physicians
- Maids Employment examination
- Armed Forces Medical Officer
- Police Prisons Doctor
- Electronics Medical Records
22Medical confidentiality-a culture of
professionalism
- Loose talk, corridor and lift gossip
- Doctors not to look at MR of patients not in
their care - Nurses, secretaries and attendants
- Conversation,MR, telephone faxes
- Confidentiality consciousness
23Medical Confidentiality-conclusions
- All medical information that doctors acquire as
part of the professional practice is subject to
the Duty of Confidentiality - Confidentiality is not absolute
- Disclosure should only occur with consent, for
benefit of patient or with just grounds for
disclosure
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