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Confidentiality in the waiting room: an observational study in general practice

journal contribution
posted on 2024-04-25, 11:09 authored by Kate Scott, Jane V. Dyas, Jo Middlemass, Niro Siriwardena
<p>An ethnographic study using overt non-participatory observation was used to investigate confidentiality breaches in 13 GP practice reception and/or waiting areas in Lincolnshire. Staff and patient behaviours were observed for 2 hours. Aspects of management systems and physical environment were also thematically analysed. Forty-four instances occurred where patient identifiable information was overheard. Of theseinstances, 22 were initiated by staff, 22 by patients, 33 face-to-face, and 10 from telephone conversations. Breaches included name and address, symptoms, conditions, or test results. Interaction between systems and physical environment in relation to ‘attention focus’, ‘sound’ and ‘layout’, increased the likelihood of breach of confidentiality. Further research on the patient perspective is recommended.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Health and Social Care (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

British Journal of General Practice

Volume

57

Issue

539

Pages/Article Number

490-493

Publisher

Royal College of General Practitioners

ISSN

0960-1643

eISSN

1478-5242

Date Submitted

2012-12-29

Date Accepted

2007-06-01

Date of First Publication

2007-06-01

Date of Final Publication

2007-06-01

Event Name

SAPC 41st Annual Scientific Meeting

Event Dates

3-4 October 2012

Date Document First Uploaded

2013-03-13

ePrints ID

7166

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