| No one can get information from your
medical file unless you consent.
Consent
When you provide information to your doctor regarding
your health, you have given your implicit consent to the
collection, use, and disclosure of that information so your
doctor can provide appropriate care.
You have implicitly consented to the doctor using this
information and sending all or part of it others, such as a
lab, hospital, other physician as necessary to give you
direct medical care.
No information will go to other doctors, lawyers, etc
without your specific written consent unless a judge signs a
court order. For example, if you are involved in a court
case about a car accident, remember that signing a "release
of medical information" can allow the lawyers to see
information about abortions and other personal information.
Right to access your personal information
As a patient, you have the right to request access to
your medical records with us, but do not necessarily have
access to everything in your file. PIPA allows doctors to
hold back information if it could cause harm to the patient
or to others.
The office’s privacy officer will help you fill out the
required form to seek access to your records and will
explain the process. The privacy officer will also talk to
you about the fee for accessing your records.
Right to correct errors or omissions
If you believe there is an error or omission in your
records held in our office, you can request a correction.
Our privacy officer will help you fill out the required form
and explain the process.
Within 30 days of receiving your request, we will correct
any information in your record that has been verified to be
inaccurate. Our office will then send a copy of the
corrected patient record to each organization that got the
incorrect or incomplete information from us in the past
year.
If we decide that no incorrect information exists in your
record, we will make a note of the change you asked for and
include it in your record to indicate a correction was
requested but not made. We will also notify you and provide
you with the reasons for not making the requested
correction.
Complaint process
If you have a complaint or concern about how your
personal information has been collected, used, or disclosed,
there is a process in place to deal with it. You have the
right to make a written complaint to your doctor’s office.
Ideally, dealing directly with the privacy officer in our
office should solve the problem, and he or she will try to
resolve the matter with you.
The privacy officer will investigate and respond to all
complaints within a reasonable time period. If the complaint
is found to be justified, appropriate steps will be taken to
resolve the complaint including, if necessary, amending
office policies and procedures about personal information.
If the doctor’s office has not dealt with your concern to
your satisfaction, you can contact the College of Physicians
and Surgeons of BC and speak with their privacy officer to
help solve the issue.
If you are still not satisfied, you can contact the
Office of the Information and Privacy Commissioner for BC,
who has the final word on the matter. Our privacy officer
will provide you with the necessary contact information and
the procedure to follow should you require it.
For more information
If you have questions about how personal information is
gathered, used, or disclosed by this office, please contact
our privacy officer.
This information is provided by your
physician and the BC Medical Association in cooperation with
the College of Physicians and Surgeons of British Columbia
and the Office of the Information and Privacy Commissioner
for British Columbia |