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Medical records not as private as they may first appear under human rights law

Posted on May 28, 2010 by Dissent

Adam Wagner reports:

A dentist has been ordered to hand over his patients’ medical records to a court in order to help his regulator prosecute him for misconduct. The case raises interesting questions of when the courts can override patient confidentiality which would otherwise be protected by the Human Rights Act.

When health professionals are being prosecuted for misconduct,their patients’ confidential records will almost invariably be disclosed to the court if requested, even without the patients’ consent. Some may find this surprising, given the fact that medical records almost invariably contain highly private and potentially embarrassing information which a person would justifiably not want disclosed in a public court. However, the situation is not as simple as it first appears, as demonstrated by the recent case of an allegedly dodgy dentist.

Read more on the UK Human Rights Blog.

The case is General Dental Council v Rimmer [2010] EWHC 1049 (Admin) (15 April 2010) – Read the judgment here.

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