Publication of all DHB Policies, Protocols and Best Practice Documents
Amy S Van Wey Lovatt (Account suspended) made this Official Information request to Auckland District Health Board
The request was refused by Auckland District Health Board.
From: Amy S Van Wey Lovatt (Account suspended)
Dear DHB,
I have repeatedly been assured from DHB's that they are committed to transparency.
Request 1:
Thus, I respectfully request that your DHB make ALL of your DHB policies, protocols and best practice documents publicly available.
While on the face of it, my request may seem like a time consuming task; however, this should not be the case. Currently, DHB policies, protocols and best practice documents are held electronically and are available on your DHB intranet (employee access only), and in many cases, there are already hyper-links between policies, protocols and best practice documents. Thus, in order to change the setting to the policies, protocols and best practice documents from private (intranet and employee access only) to public ought to be accomplished by a click of a button (or, at most, a line or two of code). Upon completion, I respectfully request a response with the website address to the DHB policies.
Request 2:
Is your DHB laboratory and radiology departments, or the agencies your DHB has contract out pathology and radiology services, IANZ accredited?
Request 3:
In the event that your DHB, or the agencies your DHB has contracted out pathology and radiology services, is IANZ accredited, I respectfully request ALL of the documentation submitted to IANZ for accreditation by your DHB (or contracted agencies) be made publicly available upon your DHB website (or as a link to your contracted agencies website). Again, while this may appear to be a daunting task on the face of it, this information ought to be in electronic form and have been collated prior to submission to IANZ. Thus, again, my request ought to be accomplished by a click of a button or at most, a few lines of code to link the website to the appropriate folder on your internal systems.
I make these request in order to save time, energy and financial resources. By making the requested information publicly available, the DHB will not need to spend valuable time and resources in answering repeated requests for policies, protocols and best practice documentation, and will help your DHB become compliant with Ministry of Health Standards (such as HISO 10064 and 10029) and legislative requirements, such as those described in the Health Information Privacy Code 1994, Health Act 1956, and Health and Disability Commissioner (Code of Health and Disability Services Consumers' Rights) Regulations 1996.
Please note I have made this request to every NZ DHB.
Yours faithfully,
Amy S Van Wey Lovatt
From: Elaine Keenan (ADHB)
Auckland District Health Board
Dear Amy
Re Official Information Request - Publication of policies protocols and best practice documents
I am writing to acknowledge your official information request dated 30 May 2020.
We will endeavour to respond to your request as soon as possible and, in any event, no later than 29 June 2020. We will contact you if an extension is required.
Please note that, like other DHBs across New Zealand, Auckland DHB has adopted a model of proactive disclosure which sees OIA responses publically available on our website approximately one month after they have been released. If you believe that there are any special reasons why proactive disclosure should not apply to our response to you, we will be happy to consider this.
Regards
Elaine Keenan
Team Administrator
Corporate Business Services
S (09) 630-9943 ext 22346 | [email address]
Auckland District Health Board | Level 1 | Building 37 | Auckland City Hospital | Park Road | Auckland
-----Original Message-----
From: Amy S Van Wey Lovatt [mailto:[FOI #12984 email]]
Sent: Saturday, 30 May 2020 4:36 a.m.
To: Ailsa Claire (ADHB)
Subject: Freedom of Information request - Publication of all DHB Policies, Protocols and Best Practice Documents
Dear DHB,
I have repeatedly been assured from DHB's that they are committed to transparency.
Request 1:
Thus, I respectfully request that your DHB make ALL of your DHB policies, protocols and best practice documents publicly available.
While on the face of it, my request may seem like a time consuming task; however, this should not be the case. Currently, DHB policies, protocols and best practice documents are held electronically and are available on your DHB intranet (employee access only), and in many cases, there are already hyper-links between policies, protocols and best practice documents. Thus, in order to change the setting to the policies, protocols and best practice documents from private (intranet and employee access only) to public ought to be accomplished by a click of a button (or, at most, a line or two of code). Upon completion, I respectfully request a response with the website address to the DHB policies.
Request 2:
Is your DHB laboratory and radiology departments, or the agencies your DHB has contract out pathology and radiology services, IANZ accredited?
Request 3:
In the event that your DHB, or the agencies your DHB has contracted out pathology and radiology services, is IANZ accredited, I respectfully request ALL of the documentation submitted to IANZ for accreditation by your DHB (or contracted agencies) be made publicly available upon your DHB website (or as a link to your contracted agencies website). Again, while this may appear to be a daunting task on the face of it, this information ought to be in electronic form and have been collated prior to submission to IANZ. Thus, again, my request ought to be accomplished by a click of a button or at most, a few lines of code to link the website to the appropriate folder on your internal systems.
I make these request in order to save time, energy and financial resources. By making the requested information publicly available, the DHB will not need to spend valuable time and resources in answering repeated requests for policies, protocols and best practice documentation, and will help your DHB become compliant with Ministry of Health Standards (such as HISO 10064 and 10029) and legislative requirements, such as those described in the Health Information Privacy Code 1994, Health Act 1956, and Health and Disability Commissioner (Code of Health and Disability Services Consumers' Rights) Regulations 1996.
Please note I have made this request to every NZ DHB.
Yours faithfully,
Amy S Van Wey Lovatt
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From: Elaine Keenan (ADHB)
Auckland District Health Board
Dear Amy
Attached please find ADHBs response to your OIA request dated 30 May 2020.
Regards
Elaine Keenan
Team Administrator/OIA Coordinator
Corporate Business Services
( (09) 630-9943 ext 22346 | * [email address]
Auckland District Health Board | Level 1 | Building 37 | Auckland City
Hospital | Park Road | Auckland
[1]cid:image003.png@01D1E7F0.9ED324E0
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From: Amy S Van Wey Lovatt (Account suspended)
Dear Elaine Keenan (ADHB),
Thank you for your responding to my OIA request; however, I note that the ADHB response dated 10 June 2020 did not provided any lawful justification for the refusal as required under the OIA. Given that the ADHB response was prior to the 20 working days allowed, I would be pleased to provide WrDHB with an opportunity to comply with my request by the legislative time-frame or to provide a lawful reason for the refusal, pursuant to section 23 of the OIA, prior to my lodging a formal complaint with the Office of the Ombudsman.
Clarification:
ADHB has stated in the response dated 10 June 2020 that making electronic documents (policies, protocols, best practice documents, etc), which are accessible on ADHB intranet and thus would only require changing the stetting from private to public, would take considerable time and resources. The personal opinion of a ADHB employees is not a lawful justification, under the OIA, for refusing an OIA request. Further, I fail to understand this response. The changing from private to public only requires a click of a button. This process could be automated and accomplished in a short amount of time through a short script, written by someone in your IS department. Indeed it would be more labor intensive if a person were to manually change the settings, one document at a time; however, this is still quite achievable in a short time frame (6 days by ADHB estimate).
Please see the Bay of Plenty website as an excellent example of transparency and public availability of policies: https://www.bopdhb.govt.nz/your-dhb/cont...(policiesprotocols)/
Bay of Plenty Navigator which provides information about referral services, etc. https://baynav.bopdhb.govt.nz/
I am certain that BoPDHB would be happy to assist ADHB with the conversion process.
ADHB has stated that ADHB does "not consider the information of public interest". Again, the personal opinion of a ADHB employee is not a lawful justification, under the OIA, for refusing an OIA request. I am a member of the public and it interests me. It is of the public interest that all government agencies are transparent and transparency was one of the basis for the enactment by Parliament of the OIA. Transparency is accomplished by making policies, protocols, and best practice documents publicly available. For instance, it is in the public interest that all patients know ADHB's policies on the safety of and access to private health information. Furthermore, ADHB has a legal obligation to provide these policies in accordance with the Health Information Privacy Code 1993, which makes it a legal obligation (Rule 3) to ensure that all consumers are informed of these policies prior to obtaining any private health information. Thus, in denying my request, you have not met your lawful obligation under Rule 3 of this code. This leads me to think that ADHB is not meeting their legal obligation for any of their patients, in particular failing to ensure that all patients have been fully informed prior to giving consent for ADHB to obtaining or use their health information.
ADHB claims that the documents necessary for accreditation are not relevant to the public interest. Again, the personal opinion of ADHB employees is not a lawful justification, under the OIA, for refusing an OIA request. This is an inaccurate statement. Again, transparency is of the public interest. The public may only be assured that the agency has met the accreditation standard if the documents and assessments are public available for inspection and audit. If ADHB does not want to take the time to publish this information, which is readily accessible and was collated for the accreditation process, then by all means ADHB may request IANZ to publish all of the requested accreditation documents on the IANZ website.
I hope this clarifies my request and the purpose of the request. I ask that ADHB begin with the immediate publication of all polices which deal with health information, data security, digital security, employee conduct, safety, etc.
Yours sincerely,
Amy S Van Wey Lovatt
From: Elaine Keenan (ADHB)
Auckland District Health Board
I am currently out of the office and will return on Tuesday 30 June 2020.
From: Elaine Keenan (ADHB)
Auckland District Health Board
Dear Amy
Attached please find ADHBs response to your OIA request dated 29 June
2020.
Regards
Elaine Keenan
Team Administrator/OIA Coordinator
Corporate Business Services
( (09) 630-9943 ext 22346 | * [email address]
Auckland District Health Board | Level 1 | Building 37 | Auckland City
Hospital | Park Road | Auckland
[1]cid:image003.png@01D1E7F0.9ED324E0
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