I would suggest that all faxing of results to GPs should be stopped
immediately.
GPs should receive the result as a usual paper report, by telephone or by
encrypted electronic messaging. If a practice requests that a report should
be faxed to them, I say no politely. If there is disagreement I suggest the
issue is referred to the Governance committees of the Acute Trust and
Primary Care Trust who will take months to resolve the issue. I find that
mentioning the risk of faxing, by accident, a patient's result to a local
Chinese restaurant or the local paper, usually focuses their minds.
Pathology has a duty of care for delivering the report to its destination.
martin myers
-----Original Message-----
From: Corns, Cathryn [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
Sent: 17 March 2003 15:37
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Faxing of results
What does everyone out there do?
We still fax reports to some GPs, at their demand, even though we know that
we do this in a way which contravenes guidance, and we are currently
reviewing this. However, one ex-fundholder practice in particular is
insistent that we fax, and not phone, reports to them. Do other labs
implement the DoH policy according to the letter, or do people use a
work-around. I know that in the long term this will all be solved by
Pathology messaging, but this surgery already has electronic links.
Cathryn Corns
Head of Biochemistry
Southend Hospital
01702 435555 ext 4058
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