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Medical profession dismisses police call to loosen patient confidentiality

Posted: 30 September 2004 | Subscribe Online


The medical profession has dismissed police calls for a review of patient confidentiality rules.

Tony Zigmond, vice president of the Royal College of Psychiatrists, described last week's call by Scotland Yard for a review of the rules so that doctors can share information with the police more easily on people with mental illness who may be dangerous as "nonsense".

Zigmond said the General Medical Council's rules already permitted doctors to breach confidentiality where they were concerned a patient may be a risk to others and they did not need to be reviewed.
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"The difficult thing is identifying which people are a risk to others. To know that would be magical. But you can't foretell the future, much as you would like to. There will always be tragedies -Êyou cannot stop them."

He added that patients may decide to avoid treatment or not disclose everything if they felt their confidence might be broken.

Last week commander Andy Baker, Scotland Yard's head of homicide investigation, called for doctors to be able to tell the police about potentially dangerous clients without fear of disciplinary measures.

Baker is working on several research projects looking at ways in which murders can be prevented including looking at how agencies can identify which people with mental health problems may kill.
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Mental health charity Sane, which has been working with Baker, has backed the call. Chief executive Marjorie Wallace said: "Over-emphasis on patient confidentiality to protect patients' rights can conflict with the rights of families and the community."

Wallace added that work by the Metropolitan Police on an "urgent change in practice and attitudes ...could prevent at least one-third of the 48 homicides involving mental illness each year".

But a spokesperson for the Sainsbury Centre for Mental Health said: "More important than a change in this law is that services users are really listened to. Our concern is that it has the potential to erode trust between doctors and service users."


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