Docmail

1 What is Docmail?

2 The Data Protection Act (1998) (DPA)

4 Other Approvals

6 Process

DPA Seventh Principle

We will sometimes use a mailing company called Docmail to handle mailings to patients. Typically this is for bulk mailings such as the invitations to attend the flu clinics where it is difficult to accommodate the administrative work involved without affecting our ability to serve patients.

The Docmail website uses the highest strength 128 bit encryption, ensuring details will be safe. The CFH production site has the highest levels of both physical and IT security which enables us to process your mailing with complete assurance.

This is permissible under guidance from both the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) and the Department of Health (DoH) subject to the provisions of the Data Protection Act

Please find below some more information about Docmail and how we work with them to ensure that we protect our patients’ personal data at all times.

1.1 What is Docmail?

Docmail is provided by CFH Total Document Management Ltd a secure print and mailing company which provides print and mailing services for Local Government, GPs, Dentists, Medical Practices, Schools, Exam Boards and Banks etc. throughout the UK.

The system can be found online at www.docmail.co.uk and requires a secure user name and password for us to log on and upload our letters and address lists to create the printed output for despatch to Royal Mail. The system allows us to upload a letter template and mailing data for the patients we want to write to via a secure web portal.

1.2 The Data Protection Act (1998) (DPA)

North Glen  Medical Practice and Docmail are both fully compliant with the Data Protection Act.

The Information Commissioners Office issued guidance in February 2012 for organisations that outsource some of its data processing to a third party. The Data Protection Act allows outsourcing to take place but stipulates certain conditions that must be met for it to be compliant.

An organisation that processes personal data is required to handle personal data in accordance with the data protection principles. A data controller may choose to use another organisation to process personal data on its behalf – a data processor.

The data controller remains responsible for ensuring its processing complies with the DPA, whether it processes in-house or engages a data processor.

Where a data processor is used the data controller must ensure that suitable security arrangements are in place in order to comply with the seventh data protection principle.

Further extracts from the guidance are reproduced here and the entire document is available on the ICO website.

North Glen Medical Practice has strictly adhered to this guidance in setting up the partnership with Docmail.

North Glen Medical Practice remains the data controller and as such has the responsibility for ensuring compliance with the provisions of the Act. We are not able to pass on those responsibilities to Docmail whose role is that of a data processor.

There is a written contract between North Glen Medical Practice and CFH – Total Document Management Ltd in addition to the standard terms of business that are published on the Docmail website.

That contract stipulates that Docmail can only act in accordance with instructions from North Glen Medical Practice i.e. they can only print and mail letters in accordance with data provided by us. They are not able to do anything else with that data.

The contract also creates a legal requirement for Docmail to act in accordance with the seventh principle of the Data Protection Act.

The Partners of North Glen Medical Practice and NHS Fife have satisfied themselves that Docmail have provided sufficient guarantees in respect of the technical and organisational security measures governing the processing to be carried out.

The partners have taken, and will continue to take, reasonable steps to ensure that Docmail are compliant with these security measures.

No data will pass outside of the European Union

 

1.3 Connecting For Health

Docmail has achieved a 100% rating in the Department of Health’s Information Governance Toolkit Assessment for 2012-2013 and we meet with the terms and conditions of the DH Information Governance Assurance Statement. This assessment is publicly available and can be viewed here.

1.4 Other Approvals

Docmail is also approved by the following:

Government Procurement Service for Hybrid Mail – which allows all government organisations to use Docmail

67 Primary Care Trusts have approved the use of Docmail. 

Caldicott Guardian across a number areas have approved the use of Docmail when asked

Ethics Committees have approved the use of Docmail by surgeries 

1.5 Accreditation’s & Security Policies

In addition to the credentials listed above, I have been supplied with Docmail’s Corporate Policies and certifications as detailed below..

ISO 27001:2005 Information Security Management System Certificate

CFH Site Security Policy

CFH Information Technology Security Policy

Information Security Policy

1.6 Process

The data file provided to Docmail will only contain enough data to enable them to fulfil the contract. This means that it will include name and address details and, where appropriate, the date and time of an appointment as well as the name of the clinician you will be seeing or the name of a clinic you will be attending eg Flu Clinic or NHS Health Check. We will of course exercise the same discretion in writing the letters as we would if we were printing and posting them at the surgery.

The letters will be delivered to your address by Royal Mail in the normal way. The letters will carry the Docmail logo and the return address on the reverse side. This address does not identify the letter as having come from a doctor’s surgery.

If you have any questions or require further information about this please ask to speak to the Practice Manager.

DPA Seventh Principle

Schedule 1 of the Data Protection Act (1998) lists eight principles of data protection. The seventh principle is of particular importance where an organisation uses a third party to process data.

The seventh data protection principle provides that:

Appropriate technical and organisational measures shall be taken against unauthorised or unlawful processing of personal data and against accidental loss or destruction of, or damage to, personal data.

The Information Commissioner’s Office provides the following guidance to organisations seeking to use a third party to process data on its behalf.

Where a data controller chooses to use a data processor, paragraphs 11 & 12 of Schedule 2, DPA introduces additional obligations on the data controller as follows:



    1. Where processing of personal data is carried out by a data processor on behalf of a data controller, the data controller must in order to comply with the seventh principle

    1. choose a data processor providing sufficient guarantees in respect of the technical and organisational security measures governing the processing to be carried out, and

    1. take reasonable steps to ensure compliance with those measures.

    1. Where processing of personal data is carried out by a data processor on behalf of a data controller, the data controller is not to be regarded as complying with the seventh principle unless:

    1. the processing is carried out under a contract:

    1. which is made or evidenced in writing, and

    1. under which the data processor is to act only on instructions from the data controller, and

    1. the contract requires the data processor to comply with obligations equivalent to those imposed on a data controller by the seventh principle.

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