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Medical Notes
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I hope this is the right category for this.
I have just been to visit my Dad in hospital. He broke his hip on Christmas Day, was discharged on Tuesday last week and is now back in hopsital with a 'significant U.T.I' and 'depleted kidney function'.
We was in A&E last night and he was later transferred to The Acute Assessment Unit.
That's where I have just been. I asked the nurse if I could see his notes and she refused saying, 'They are not your notes. If you want to see them you have to apply to the 'General Office'. I will find out where that is tomorrow.
I have power of attorney for my dad. Will it be a problem accessing his notes? Was she right to refuse to allow me to see them. I presume it has something to do with data protection.
I have just been to visit my Dad in hospital. He broke his hip on Christmas Day, was discharged on Tuesday last week and is now back in hopsital with a 'significant U.T.I' and 'depleted kidney function'.
We was in A&E last night and he was later transferred to The Acute Assessment Unit.
That's where I have just been. I asked the nurse if I could see his notes and she refused saying, 'They are not your notes. If you want to see them you have to apply to the 'General Office'. I will find out where that is tomorrow.
I have power of attorney for my dad. Will it be a problem accessing his notes? Was she right to refuse to allow me to see them. I presume it has something to do with data protection.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It does, tilly - you're not allowed to see anyone's notes but your own, staff would be in considerable trouble for showing a third party your dad's notes. However, if you have power of attorney, you need to make the hospital aware of that, and show them evidence. It may help if your GP confirms this.
you have to apply to the hospital to see the notes, even if you have power of attorney. this an take 40 days and you may have to fund the cost of the copies made (as some may have material deleted etc) it is covered under the data protection act. you do not have the right to see your own notes, either - but if you don't make a fuss.....peek at them if you get a chance as they do get left lying around all over the place. or see your patient's liaison team in the hospital for further help.
btw....i am a nurse and help people access their notes regularly. you have to apply, have the decision agreed and then pay for copies. see the hospital rules for any differences, but those are the basic rule. but as i said, if you don't make a fuss and mooch around the ward, you may be able to read them anyway!!!! x
that's what i mean, tilly. don't ask them.....just read them! it is a bit awful the way they are left lying around in general settings....anyone could read them. the psych ward where i work keeps them in an office under lock and key - they never leave the office as they contain extremely sensitive information that patients do not always agree with.