Caldicott Report 1997
Report on the Review of Patient-Identifiable Information
Health & Social Care
First Caldicott review establishing principles for the handling of patient-identifiable information in the NHS. Introduced the concept of the Caldicott Guardian and six foundational principles for data flows.
6recommendations
6Not Yet Responded
Government Response
All 16 recommendations accepted. Caldicott Guardian role and principles became embedded in NHS data governance.
1 June 1998
Recommendations
Recommendation Principle 1
Justify the purpose(s)
Every proposed use or transfer of patient identifiable information within or from an organisation should be clearly defined and scrutinised, with continuing uses regularly reviewed, by an appropriate guardian.
Recommendation Principle 2
Don't use patient identifiable information unless it is absolutely necessary
Patient identifiable information items should not be included unless it is essential for the specified purpose(s) of that flow. The need for patients to be identified should be considered at each stage of satisfying the purpose(s).
Recommendation Principle 3
Use the minimum necessary patient-identifiable information
Where use of patient identifiable information is considered to be essential, the inclusion of each individual item of information should be considered and justified so that the minimum amount of identifiable information is transferred or accessible as is necessary for a given function to be carried out.
Recommendation Principle 4
Access to patient identifiable information should be on a strict need-to-know basis
Only those individuals who need access to patient identifiable information should have access to it, and they should only have access to the information items that they need to see. This may mean introducing access controls or splitting information flows where one information flow is used for several purposes.
Recommendation Principle 5
Everyone with access to patient identifiable information should be aware of their responsibilities
Action should be taken to ensure that those handling patient identifiable information — both clinical and non-clinical staff – are made fully aware of their responsibilities and obligations to respect patient confidentiality.
Recommendation Principle 6
Understand and comply with the law
Every use of patient identifiable information must be lawful. Someone in each organisation handling patient information should be responsible for ensuring that the organisation complies with legal requirements.