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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) - Government
Amendments
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. Additional amendments have been drafted to
accommodate concerns that have been raised by the Scrutiny of Bills Committee in
regards to further safeguards to protect the disclosure and use of personal
health information used for research purposes.
Revenue/Cost
Implications
There are no additional costs involved with these
amendments.
Government
Amendments
Amendment 1 – Clause 5 proposed new
principle 4.2 new clause 3, Page 4, line 27 – inserts a new clause 3
to provide a minimum timeframe of seven years for keeping a record on the
register.
Amendment 2 – Clause 7
proposed new principle 10 clause 3(a), Page 7, line 19 – substitutes a
new clause 3(a) to include a public interest test for the use and disclosure of
personal health information used for research or the compilation or analysis of
statistics, in the public interest.
Amendment 3 – Clause 7 proposed new
principle 10 clause 3(e) and (f), Page 8, line 10 – inserts new
paragraph (e) and (f) to provide for the entity to comply with guidelines
regarding the entities internal procedures and oversight requirements in respect
of its handling of personal health information used for research purposes.
Paragraph (f) also provides that the record keeper needs to be of the belief
that the recipient will not disclose the information.
Amendment 4 – Proposed new clause
16A, Page 23, line 7 – inserts a new clause 16A to provide a new
regulation making power consequential on the requirement to prescribe guidelines
in amendment 3.
Amendment 5 – Proposed
new clause 22, Page 24, line 26 – inserts a new definition of privacy
principles which is necessary and consequential on the changes made in
amendments 3 and 4.
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