The
Therapy Pathis committed to protecting the privacy of all
personal information that is collected to enable us to
provide quality speech, language and hearing care to
you. In order to achieve this, it is our policy to
collect, use and disclose personal information
responsibly, limit the information we collect to what we
need and to make our policies available to you. This
document describes our privacy policies.
Personal
information is information about an identifiable
individual. Personal information includes information
that relates to personal characteristics (e.g., gender,
age, home address or phone number, ethnic background,
family status), health (e.g., health history, health
conditions, health services received) or activities and
views (e.g. opinions expressed by an individual, an
opinion or evaluation of an individual). Personal
information is to be contrasted with business
information (e.g., an individual’s business address and
telephone number), which is not protected by privacy
legislation.
The
Therapy Pathincludes at the time of writing two
speech-language pathologists. To assist us in
providing services, we use consultants that may, in the
course of their duties, have limited access to personal
information we hold, such as: computer consultants,
office security and maintenance, bookkeepers and
accountants, cleaners and lawyers. We restrict their
access to any personal information we hold as much as is
reasonably possible. We also have their assurance that
they follow appropriate privacy principles.
Our
primary purpose for collecting personal information is
to provide speech language and hearing services. For
example, we collect information about a your health
history that will be relevant to communication disorders
and assist us in offering effective intervention
options. A second primary purpose is to obtain a
baseline of your communication skills or hearing to
track how that changes over time. It would be rare for
us to collect such information without your express
consent, but this might occur in an emergency (e.g., the
patient/client is unconscious) or where we believe you
would consent if asked and it is impractical to obtain
consent (e.g., a family member passing a message on from
you and we have no reason to believe that the message is
not genuine).
About Members of the General Public
Our
primary purpose for collecting contact information about
members of the public is to make them aware of speech,
language and hearing services in general or our services
in particular. We try to obtain consent before using any
personal contact information, but where this is not
possible, we will, upon request, immediately remove the
information from our distribution list.
On our website we only collect the personal information
you provide and only use that information for the
purpose you gave it to us (e.g., to respond to your
email message). Any information inadvertently collected
will only be used to help you navigate our website
(e.g., a website “cookie”).
About Contract Staff, Volunteers and Students
For
people who are contracted to do work for us (e.g.,
temporary workers), our primary purpose for collecting
personal contact information is to ensure we can get in
touch with them for employment purposes to better serve
our patient/clients. It is rare for us to collect such
information without prior consent, but it might happen
in the case of a health emergency (e.g., an infectious
disease outbreak) or to investigate a possible breach of
law (e.g., if a theft were to occur in our office). We
also collect information in order to do performance
appraisals, provide feedback to students’ instructors or
write references if requested.
Related and Secondary Purposes
for collecting personal information
The
Therapy Pathalso collects, uses and discloses information
for purposes related to or secondary to our primary
purposes. The most common examples are as follows:
qTo secure payment for goods or services.
qTo advise patient/clients of the need for
follow-up services.
qTo advise patient/clients and others of
special events or opportunities (e.g., a seminar, a new
service, a new hearing aid or other product).
qTo evaluate our services and the
performance of our staff. This may involve external
consultants (e.g., auditors, lawyers, practice
consultants, voluntary accreditation programs) to do
audits and continuing quality improvement reviews of our
services, including reviewing patient/client files and
interviewing our staff.
qTo allow us to meet our regulatory
obligations. The College of Audiologists and
Speech-Language Pathologists may inspect our records and
interview our staff as a part of their regulatory
activities in the public interest. Various government
agencies (e.g., Canada Customs and Revenue Agency,
Privacy Commissioner, Human Rights Commission, etc.)
have the authority to review our files and interview our
staff as a part of their mandates. External regulators
have their own strict privacy obligations. In these
circumstances, we may consult with professionals (e.g.,
lawyers, accountants) who will investigate the matter
and report back to us.
qTo provide information to third party
payers (e.g., OHIP, WSIB, private insurance, Assistive
Devices Program) when they pay for the goods and
services you receive from us. We will obtain your
consent to disclose your personal information in these
instances except in instances where there is legislative
authority to collect, use or disclose the information.
qTo answer any questions you may have about
the service you received once it is concluded. The
College of Audiologists and Speech-Language Pathologists
requires that we keep records for at least 10 years
following your last intervention or in the case of a
child, 10 years past the child’s 18th
birthday.
qTo allow us to provide required
information to a prospective purchaser if this practice
or its assets are to be sold, in order to conduct a “due
diligence” review of our accounting and service files.
Only reputable purchasers who have already agreed to buy
the organization’s business or its assets would be
provided access to personal information, and only for
the purpose of completing their due diligence search
prior to closing the purchase.
We
understand the importance of protecting personal
information. For that reason, we have taken the
following steps:
qPaper information is either under
supervision or secured in a locked or restricted area.
qElectronic hardware is either under
supervision or secured in a locked or restricted area.
Our computers are password protected. Our office phones
are cord phones and our cell phones are digital as these
signals are more difficult to intercept.
qPaper
information is sealed and transmitted by reputable
companies.
qSpecial care is taken to ensure privacy
when transmitting electronic information. Where we are
unsure of the security of the electronic transfer of
information, identifying information is removed.
qStaff are trained to collect, use and
disclose personal information only as necessary to
fulfill their duties and in accordance with our privacy
policy.
qExternal consultants and agencies with
access to personal information must enter into privacy
agreements with us.
The
College of Audiologists and Speech-Language Pathologists
of Ontario requires that we retain our patient/client
records for 10 years past the last visit or in the case
of a child, for 10 years past the child’s 18th
birthday. We destroy our files within three months of
that time. These files include your contact
information. Contact information for members of the
public is kept for 3 years unless requested to do so
earlier.
We destroy paper files containing personal information
by shredding or burning. We destroy electronic
information by deleting it and, when the hardware is
discarded, we ensure that the hard drive is physically
destroyed.
With only
a few exceptions, you have the right to see what
personal information we hold about you. Often all you
have to do is ask. We will need to confirm your
identity, if we do not know you, before providing you
with this access. We reserve the right to charge a
nominal fee for such requests.
If we cannot give you access, we will tell
you within 30 days
if at all possible and tell you the reason, as best we
can, as to why we cannot give you access.
If you believe there is a mistake in the information,
you have the right to ask for it to be corrected. This
applies to factual information and not our professional
opinions. We may ask you to provide documentation that
our files are wrong. Where we agree that we made a
mistake, we will make the correction and notify anyone
to whom we sent this information. If we do not agree
that we have made a mistake, we will still agree to
include in our file a brief statement from you on the
point and we will forward that statement to anyone else
who received the earlier information.
Do You Have a Question or a concern?
Our
partners, John Stark or Cindy Wilson,
Speech-Language Pathologists can be reached at:
7Balsam St. South | Timmins, ON | P4N 2C7 PHONE
(705) 267-2270
They will attempt to answer any questions or concerns
you might have.