Managing Data Breaches and New Mandatory Disclosure Requirements in Medical Practice
- Publisher:
- Australasian Medical Publishing Company Ltd
- Publication Type:
- Journal Article
- Citation:
- Medical Journal of Australia, 2018, 17 September 2017
- Issue Date:
- 2018-06-25
Closed Access
Filename | Description | Size | |||
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10.5694mja17.00577.pdf | Published Version | 212.25 kB |
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The Australian Government has introduced new mandatory disclosure rules, which came into force in February 2018, requiring most health and medical providers to notify patients or others affected when there is a serious data breach that results in unauthorised access to personal information.1 With fines of up to $420 000 for individuals and far higher fines for businesses that fail to report serious data breaches,1 the mismanagement of a breach by a medical practice will potentially be very serious. With the current scheme, early data show that health care organisations are responsible for almost one-quarter of data breach reports, while just over 50% of all reported breaches are due to human error.2 These results underscore the importance of the scheme for health care practitioners and practices, as well as the central role internal systems and staff play in combatting the risk of a data breach.
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