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Lead officer reveals data-sharing 'myth'

Posted: 24 February 2005 | Subscribe Online


Older people's consent must be gained before Pensions Service and local authority benefits staff working in joint teams are allowed to share data on them, an LGA conference was told last week.

Christine Clark, lead officer for data protection at the Department for Work and Pensions, said it was a "myth" that staff on joint teams could freely share data. "We do have to rely on customer consent to share data and, if it is sensitive data about someone's health or ethnicity, then explicit consent - a signature on paper - is needed," she said.
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Clark added: "The danger of running on the wrong side of the law is that it only takes one aggrieved of Tunbridge Wells to write to the data protection commissioner and the whole thing comes tumbling down."

However, if the call was simply a check, it was possible that prior consent was not needed, she added.


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