Apr 10, 2019

Is the aged care facility allowed to refuse the resident’s GP contact details to family?

A recent comment posted on the Aged Care Advocacy Facebook Group raised an important question about family members gaining access to an aged care resident’s doctor’s contact details.

The question posed was:

“Is the daughter of an aged care resident allowed to ask the aged care facility for their mother’s doctor’s contact details? Is the aged care facility allowed to refuse the contact details?”

The post attracted dozens of comments with strong arguments on both sides.

One person replied that family “most certainly” should be allowed to have doctor contact details, but a doctor who works in a residential aged care facility said she doesn’t give family her contact details, and that it’s better for the facility to try to address any family concerns before she gets involved.

With the matter seemingly undecided, we sought clarification from the Australian Medical Association.

The patient decides, says AMA ethics Chair

Dr Chris Moy, the Chair of the AMA’s Ethics and Medico-Legal Committee, told HelloCare the patient should decide if the family should be given the doctor’s contact details.

“If a patient has decision-making capacity, they decide,” he said.

If the patients no longer has the capacity, then a substitute decision maker can make the call, Dr Moy said.

“If the patient has impaired decision-making capacity, a SDM appointed by the patient, under an advance care directive for example, or by a statutory authority, should decide as the SDM ‘becomes’ the patient,” he said.

No other family members have an automatic right to access the doctor’s details, Dr Moy said.

“Other individuals, including other relatives, have no extra right to access private information regarding a patient, including the patient’s doctor’s details, if the patient or SDM do not want this to occur.”

Family members don’t always have the resident’s best interests at heart

Dr Moy said family members can sometimes have ulterior motives, such as their own financial gain.

“This happens,” Dr Moy said.

Aged care residents “may want these individuals excluded from this information because they know that these individuals will try to contact the doctor to try to influence them in a malicious way or for self-interested reasons, eg to gain financial advantage,” he said.

“Individual jurisdictions or facilities may have particular policies, but they would still have to come under privacy principles, and the patient or SDM would still have to be clear about these when signing up for the facility,” Dr Moy concluded.

Please note: The image used to illustrate this article does not reflect actual people or events. Image: iStock.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

When Neighbours Become Good Friends

The close friendship of Sue Marsden and Margaret Dixon is truly a case of the stars aligning. In December 2016, it was through pure serendipity that Margaret and Alan Dixon moved next door to Sue at Settlers Retirement Village, Forest Lake. Sue introduced herself to the couple the night they moved in, armed with a... Read More

7 Ways to Gather Customer Feedback

Customer feedback is more than measuring customer satisfaction, it’s vital for any organisation to improve and grow. But it’s not just getting customer feedback that makes a business better – it’s utilising it to it’s full potential. It’s one thing to simply know that there are things you can improve on, things you can change,... Read More

“I felt a boulder was taken off my shoulders. The load had lifted.”

Lorraine and Norman, both 89, have been married for 46 years, and though they are both experiencing some of the challenges associated with ageing, they continue to work together as a team, and their love and support for each other, along with a little help from the community, has enabled them to continue living happily... Read More
Advertisement