Hot topic: Consent for audio or visual recordings
Post date: 04/02/2013 | Time to read article: 2 minsThe information within this article was correct at the time of publishing. Last updated 19/05/2020
Consent for taking photographs and making recordings is vital, explains MPS medicolegal adviser Dr Pallavi Bradshaw.
The smart phone revolution has fundamentally changed the way we interact in society and has created a reliance on technology that pervades even clinical practice. With the invention of medical apps, gone are the days of white coats laden with various clinical handbooks. It is unsurprising that mobile phones are often used to take photographs of interesting cases and recordings made of interesting patients. Whilst most of these photographs are taken to show to colleagues to aid diagnosis or to be used as potential case reports, the doctors taking the photographs may be inadvertently breaching GMC, employment and legal obligations, if the right consent has not been taken.
The GMC has produced supplementary guidance Making and using visual and audio recordings of patients (2011), it sets out the professional obligations of taking images or recordings of patients. Issues around confidentiality and consent are paramount and must not be overlooked even in the theatre setting with anaesthetised patients.
If there is a clinical need or a desire to take images for diagnosis or education purposes it is not appropriate to use personal cameras and mobile phones. Agreement by a patient to take an image does not obviate your obligations to your employer, or your duties of confidentiality. There are ultimately no circumstances, save for emergencies, when taking patient images on a mobile phone, whether consented or not, is justified, so should not be done.
NB. Doctors working in a GP setting or in private practice should seek further advice if they are concerned.
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