FOI - Freedom of Information Act
2000
“Another Time
Consuming Minefield”
GPC Freedom of
Information Act 2000 
Frequently
Asked Questions – Updated August 2005
This guidance is only relevant to England, Northern Ireland and Wales –
Local Copy
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A Practice Must: 1
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A Practice Can: 1
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A Practice Cannot: 2
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A Practice Should. 2
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Fees. 2
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Staff Awareness. 2
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Further Help. 2
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Coming Very Soon. 3
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Final Words of Comfort 3
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What is the
Freedom of Information Act?. 3
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Information,
Forms and Guidance. 3
To
quote a PCT manager, equally as frustrated as many GPs and practice
managers! However failure to comply
could result in fines and potentially imprisonment – hence my reason for
bothering you with it.
From
31st October
2003 general practices were required to have a publication
scheme. If you’ve not done one, go to
our website and download a template with notes which will take you a couple of
hours to work through.
From
1st January 2005
the Act comes into full force and requires public bodies (general practices are
specifically deemed as such by the Act) to respond to individuals’ requests for
information. Requests must:
- Be in writing
(electronically counts)
- State name of the
applicant and an address for correspondence
- Describe the
information requested
- Respond to a request within 20 working days.
When
does the clock start to tick? From
the first working day after the day the request is received.
- Inform the applicant of any charge that will be
made and how it is arrived at.
- Try to provide the information in the format
requested.
- Tell the applicant whether you hold the
information sought.
- Disclose all information unless there is an
overriding reason not to.
- State reasons for non disclosure and the
exemption applied.
- Ask the applicant to be
more specific in their request for information.
- Ask the applicant how
they would like the information presented to them.
Although
if they don’t state you can I think supply as best suits you??
- Refer the applicant to
a third party for information where the practice is not the holder of
information
– e.g. the PCT for their annual report or for Quality Points of other
practices. QUERY?
- Refer the applicant to
their publication scheme or publications if information is there
– e.g. practice website or leaflets.
- Appeal against any
rulings made by the Information Commissioner
- Ask the applicant why
they want the information.
- Remind the applicant that the information is
copyright and cannot be reproduced for commercial purposes.
- Promptly request payment in advance of any
charges.
The
clock stops ticking until payment is received/cheques cleared but don’t
delay paying in!
- Ask for advice from PCT, Information Commissioner
or GPC/LMC when applying an exemption or refusing to provide information.
This
is probably a case of keep asking until you get the advice you want!The
LMC website will contain a record of exemptions used and their status.
- Bear in mind the applicant can appeal to the
Information Commissioner where information requests are denied or costs
deemed high. The practice will have
to comply with any ruling subject to any appeal by the practice.
The advice on this sounds
very conflicting to me and the guidance is long and complex!
- You cannot charge a fee for the information
unless it costs more than £450 to retrieve and collate. Maximum rate chargeable for staff time
is £25 per hour in order to calculate your total costs. You need to estimate this at the outset
before carrying the work out. Any
work required to prepare the estimate can only be charged if the cost
exceeds £450.
- Under £450 GPs can charge reasonable costs for
copying, printing, postage and other disbursements such as staff time for
summarising and transferring into media requested. Note you cannot charge for staff time to
retrieve and collate information if total cost is under £450.
- Note that you can ask for the charges to be paid
prior to the information being disclosed.
If the charge is unpaid, then the request lapses after 3 months.
- You can also refuse to supply the information on
cost grounds if cost is greater than £450.
Staff Awareness
It is important that your
staff are:
- aware of the Freedom of Information Act.
- familiar with your publication scheme and the
information you publish in order to show it to patients.
- Aware that personal information about them or
patients will not be disclosed except to the individual concerned.
- Aware that patients or staff wanting access to their
personal records are entitled to do so under the Data Protection Act and
should contact the Practice Manager (or whoever you appoint to carry out
this task).
- able to direct patients to write in to the
Practice Manager (or whoever you appoint to carry out this task) with
other requests for information.
- Aware of their responsibility with regard to
keeping. labelling and storing information correctly in accordance with
practice policy.
- Template documents on Devon
LMC website
·
Publication
scheme
·
FOI Request Log
- FOI PowerPoint presentation for GPs and Staff on general awareness
- Information audit log
- Email policy
- Records Management Policy
- Guidance on Meeting Minute Keeping
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You are not obliged by law to have the above policies however chaotic
records management will not be seen as an excuse for long – you need to show
that you are sorting it out.
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PCTs are also encountering problems with the audit and many in Devon have not finished.
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Most of the information to which FOI applies will be held by the
practice manager, management team or secretaries.
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Get in the habit of
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filing emails you need to keep and deleting the rest on a regular basis
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not keeping copies of information originated by someone else – they
should have a copy if you need it again.
This means of course that the person originating information should
decide how long it needs to be kept!
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The
Freedom of Information Act 2000, which came about as a result of one of the
major commitments in the Labour Party’s 1997 manifesto, creates new rights of
public access to information held by public authorities, as defined under the
Act.
To
facilitate this, it obliges such public authorities to make it clear to the
public what information they hold.
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· Puts a legal requirement on NHS organisations to
publish and share information
· Allows members of the public to see what information
you have stored in your practice, and to access it
· Will grant full access rights in January 2005
· Demands a publication scheme be in
place in every NHS organisation by October of this year.
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Devon LMC FOI Template - August 2003 – Doc (including
update below)
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FOI - Notes on Devon LMC
Template - August 2003 - Doc
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FOI - URGENT
UPDATE to the Template – Doc (this is for those
who already have a copy)
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Main DOH Web Site - http://www.foi.nhs.uk/impl_indep_home.html
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GPC Guidance on FOI – July 2003 - PDF
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If you require help
in dealing with the FOI please contact Nicola Heywood – nicola@devonlmc.org
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Last Updated on 26 August 2005
By
John Baker Email: jb@devonlmc.org