record management

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Records Management and the NHS Code of Practice (Foundation) Information Governance Policy Team NHS Connecting for Health

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Page 1: Record Management

Records Management and the NHS Code of Practice (Foundation)

Information Governance Policy TeamNHS Connecting for Health

Page 2: Record Management

Key Learning Points

What is Records Management? What is a record? Who is responsible for records? The Records Management: NHS Code of

Practice Benefits of records and records management The Records Lifecycle

Page 3: Record Management

What is Records Management?

• Systematic management of all records

• Paper and electronic records

Page 4: Record Management

What is a record?

Records document each and every activity

They are the organisation’s memory

Page 5: Record Management

Types of Records

Health records

X-rays

Administrative records

Photographs, slides, and other images

Microfilm

Audio and video tapes, cassettes, CD-ROM

Diaries

E-mails, text messages

Etc, etc, etc

Page 6: Record Management

Who is responsible for records?

‘All individuals who work for an NHS organisation are responsible for any records which they create or use in the performance of their duties….. any record that an individual creates is a public record.’

Records Management: NHS Code of Practice

Page 7: Record Management

The Records Management: NHS Code of Practice

A guide to:

• Standards of best practice

• Legal requirements

Page 8: Record Management

What does the Code of Practice replace? HSC 1999/053 – For the Record

HSC 1998/217 – Preservation, Retention and Destruction of GP General Medical Services Records Relating to Patients

HSC 1998/153 – Using Electronic Patient Records in Hospitals: Legal Requirements and Good Practice.

Page 9: Record Management

Guidance aims

Establish a Records Management framework Clarify legal obligations Detail required actions Explain the requirement for permanent

preservation Set out recommended minimum retention

periods Where to find further information

Page 10: Record Management

Records are a valuable resource!

They support:

Patient care

Administrative decision making

Legal requirements

Clinical audits

Patient choice

Page 11: Record Management

Benefits of Records Management

Better use of space

Better use of time

Improved control of resources

Compliance with legislation

Reduce costs

Page 12: Record Management

Record Lifecycle

Any record created by an individual, up to its disposal, is a public record and subject to Information Requests

Create Use Retention DisposalAppraisal

Clo

se R

eco

rd

Be aware ControlMonitor

Page 13: Record Management

Record Creation

Each function must document all activities and ensure records are:

AccurateCompleteEasy to find and retrieve

Credible and Authoritative

Page 14: Record Management

Information Quality Assurance

Managers must ensure that staff are trained

What?How?Why?

What to recordHow to recordWhy to record

How to validate

& update records

AND

Page 15: Record Management

Record Keeping

What records are held, where and who manages them?

ing

Records Inventory Survey

MANUAL RECORDS INVENTORY FORM (EG PAPER, X-RAY, MICROFORM ETC)

1 Yes

No

2 Name of the record

3

4 Yes If 'Yes', where?

No

5 Name

Job Title

Tel No.6

Other Specify

Microform

Who is responsible for managing the record?

Format of the recordPaper Film/X-ray

Do you store records in the dept?

Alternative name of the record (where appropriate)

Are duplicates of the record held?

Page 16: Record Management

Records Inventory Survey

A stepped approach is recommended

Non-HealthRecords

Step 4 Estates, IM&T, Other

Step 3 Administrative records, Purchasing & supplies

Step 2 Human Resources, Finance

Health Records

Step 1 PAS or PAS- fed Clinical Systems

Paper based, scanned, microform records etc.

Standalone clinical systemsDatabases e.g. research

Page 17: Record Management

Record Maintenance

Control record movement and location

Storage areas should be clean and tidy

Stores should be secure

Secondary storage for non-current records

Contingency/Business Continuity Plans

Page 18: Record Management

Scanning

Scanning paper records can reduce storage requirements

Page 19: Record Management

Scanning

However:

• Costs of initial conversion

• Consult with The National Archives

• Protect the evidential value

Page 20: Record Management

Disclosure and Transfer of Records

Statutory provisions limit the disclosure of records

• Freedom of Information Act 2000

• Data Protection Act 1998

• The Abortion Regulations 1991

• Crime and Disorder Act 1998

• Public Records Act 1958

Page 21: Record Management

Disclosure and Transfer of Records

If you have any concerns, contact, as appropriate, your organisation’s:

• Caldicott Guardian;

• Information Security Officer;

• Data Protection Officer;

• Health Records Manager; or

• Records Manager.

Page 22: Record Management

Retention and Disposal Arrangements All organisations should have Record Retention and Disposal policies to ensure records are annually selected for:

• Secondary storage (eg off-site or scanned etc)

• Permanent archival preservation

• Destruction

Page 23: Record Management

Record Destruction

• Records must be destroyed in a secure environment

• Contractors must abide by Confidentiality Agreements

• Maintain a register of the destruction of records

Page 24: Record Management

Further Guidance and useful links

DH: Confidentiality NHS Code of Practice

DH: Records Management NHS Code of Practice

The Data Protection Act 1998

The Freedom of Information Act 2000

The IG Policy Team Website Records Management Roadmap

The Department of Health website

Information Commissioners Office website (more information and guidance on FOI and DPA)