A recent consult with a new patient led to some interesting insights into how p*ss poor, sorry for the naughty grunt word, the NHS Summary Care Record (SCR) scheme is given the fact that it has been at least 7 years in the making.
The instigator
of this idea was a public school educated Scot with shiny teeth and not much
else who is currently earning loads of wads doing nothing useful and has a
track record in computing equivalent to Pol Pot's in providing better modern
healthcare to the masses. Come to think of it the former did something similar
in the UK too. We digress.
The patient had
a chronic illness and so needed medication to sustain life and we here at ND
Central ask all new patients to see us with regard to their medication. Most of
the time this is routine and we merely place the patient's previous medication
onto our computer system and print off a repeat prescription and advise them
how to get another.
Sometimes this
is useful for we have had "diabetics" on treatment whose previous GPs
had diagnosed them with diabetes with a random blood sugar of 8 or whose
previous medication was lethal or whose previous GPs had got it completely wrong
or who had failed to investigate what they were treating their patient for. For
most patients this is an inconvenience but sometimes seeing a new doctor with a
clean sheet can be to your benefit in contrast to the Party's view that your
SCR is completely right.
Our new patient
asked to be excluded from their QOF (Quality and Outcome Framework) defined
illnesses which if we were true Party players would immediately suggest severe
mental illness in our patient and automatic inclusion on another Party defined
register but we had no problem with individual freedom and so we
"excepted" our patient at their request and with their fully informed
consent.
This will no
doubt incur the wrath of the local Soviet for GPs in the UK are only allowed a
certain percentage of informed dissenters. Go above that and even if you have a
highly intelligent well read practice population who see through the Party you
will receive a visit from one of the Senator McCarthy QOF tsars at the local
Soviet to ask you about your above target dissent rate. (These McCarthys think
that high dissent rates = work avoidance rather than patients exercising NHS
Choice).
We know our
patient will get far better care from our local excellent consultants at the
local teaching hospital for they have been providing this for the patient long
before QOF was even thought of.
Our new patient
also had another request. They wanted to know if their request to have their
medical records withheld from the SCR had been transferred from their previous
GP to us and would their medically confidential data be safe from widespread
viewing via the NHS super secure sieve called the SCR?
The answer was
that their GP electronic record had not been transferred to us.
Only their Lloyd George paper GP records which are probably still the most complete patient record in the UK and somewhere in it amongst realms and realms and realms of computer printouts maybe the patient's request to be excluded from the SCR might be found. Their last 2 years of medical records printed off from NHS Party Care records will outweigh the succinct 50 years of hand written records. To our patient's disgust we showed them their (blank) medical record on the computer screen, which in contrast to some GPs is always viewable by our patients.
The computer
screen on a little hidden drop down box told the patient
that they had given their implied consent to the creation of a full SCR despite
them never have been consulted and despite them previously and actively opted
out of this scheme many years before at their previous doctors.
So in true
Soviet style the current Tripartite NHS confidentiality position is that all
patients give implied consent to the disclosure of their medical records in the
same way that MPs all gave their implied consent to disclosure of their
expenses and did not object at all to their disclosure.
And yet we as
GPs have to respect any corrupt MPs medical confidentiality as they are allowed
not even to appear on the SCR or the NHS spine something you will have great
trouble with if you wished to do so as a private citizen or were even allowed
to do so as a private citizen which you are not comrade patient.
Remember Comrade
Andrew and his sound bite no decision about me without me quote?
Praise be to the
Party for its assumption that all patients want a Stasi record in the same way
that East Germans gave their consent for the same. Our patient was not
impressed with this arrogant assumption having already opted out once and we
are now all making completely unnecessary appointments with our GPs to check if
their computer systems do the same for some have changed supplier.