Data Protection Policy

This website is managed by the Royal College of Anaesthetists and the following policy also applies to the Centre for Perioperative Care.

1  Purpose

This policy explains how the Royal College of Anaesthetists and its subsidiaries (the 'College') comply with the UK’s Data Protection Act 2018. The College is committed to being transparent about how it collects and uses the personal data of its members and employees, and to meeting its data protection obligations. This policy sets out the College's commitment to data protection and individual’s rights and obligations in relation to personal data.

2  Scope

This policy applies to all personal data handled by the College, data held in paper files AND electronically. 

The purpose of this policy is to ensure that the College and the College’s staff comply with the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) when processing personal data. This policy applies regardless of where the data is held, ie if it is held on personally owned equipment or outside College property.

This policy applies to all College staff, whether permanent, temporary, contractors, consultants or secondees and includes College leads and fellows in backfilled posts.

3  Data Protection Officer

The College has appointed Ian Drayton, Data Protection Officer, as the person with responsibility for data protection compliance within the College. He can be contacted at: dpo@rcoa.ac.uk. Questions about this policy, or requests for further information, should be directed to him or his nominated deputies (Member data: Emily Worth, Membership Data Manager (eworth@rcoa.ac.uk); Employee data: Judith Tidnam, Head of People and Culture (jtidnam@rcoa.ac.uk)

4  Definitions

"Personal data" is any information that relates to an individual who can be identified from that information. 

“The data controller” exercises overall control over the purpose for which, and the manner in which, personal data are processed.

“Processing” is any use that is made of data, including collecting, storing, amending, disclosing or destroying it.

"Special categories of personal data or sensitive personal data" means information about an individual's racial or ethnic origin, political opinions, religious or philosophical beliefs, trade union membership, health, sex life or sexual orientation, genetics and biometric data.

"Criminal records data" means information about an individual's criminal offences and convictions, and information relating to criminal allegations and proceedings.

5  Data protection principles

The College processes personal data in accordance with the following data protection principles:

  • The College processes personal data lawfully, fairly and in a transparent manner.
  • The College collects personal data only for specified, explicit and legitimate purposes.
  • The College processes personal data only where it is adequate, relevant and limited to what is necessary for the purposes of processing.
  • The College keeps accurate and up to date personal data and takes all reasonable steps to ensure that inaccurate or out of date personal data is rectified or deleted without delay.
  • The College keeps personal data only for the period necessary for processing.
  • The College processes personal data in line with the data subject’s rights.
  • The College puts in place appropriate security measures to make sure that personal data is secure, and protected against unauthorised access or unlawful processing, and accidental loss, destruction or damage.
  • The College will not transfer data to countries outside the European Economic Area (EEA) without adequate protection ie without recognised statutory data protection equivalents.

6  Legal basis for processing personal or sensitive data

The College will only process personal data if it can satisfy at least one of the following conditions in relation to that data:

  1. Consent – the data subject whom the personal data is about has consented to the processing
  2. Contractual – processing is necessary for the performance of a contract with the data subject or to take steps to enter into a contract eg for an employment contract
  3. Legal obligation – processing is necessary for compliance with a legal obligation
  4. Protection of vital interests of a data subject – where it is necessary to protect an interest which is essential for the life of the data subject or that of another natural person
  5. Public interest/official authority - processing is necessary for the performance of tasks carried out by a public authority or private organisation acting in the public interest.
  6. Legitimate interests – processing is necessary for purposes of legitimate interests pursued by the College or a third party, except where such interests are overridden by the interests, rights or freedoms of the data subject.

The College will only process special category data or criminal records where:

  • The data subject has given explicit consent to the processing of the personal data for one or more specified purposes. For the consent to be explicit, the data subject must signify their agreement and there must be some statement or a clear affirmative action that signifies agreement to the processing of personal data relating to them.
  • The information is required by law to process the data for employment purposes.
  • The information is needed to protect the vital interests of the data subject or another, and consent cannot be given or reasonably sought.

The College has a Data Retention Policy to ensure that personal data processed for any purpose(s) shall only be kept for as long as a business process requires or to fulfill legal obligations to record keeping, depending on which is the longest. 

The College will ensure that its processing activities are registered with the Information Commissioners Office (ICO).

The College will make its Privacy Notice available on its website.

7  Individual Rights

As a data subject, individuals have a number of rights in relation to their personal data.

Subject Access Requests (SAR)

Individuals are entitled to access the information that the College holds about them. This is known as the right of subject access.

If an individual makes a subject access request, the College will comply with the relevant legislation:

  • confirm whether any personal data is being processed;
  • provide a description of the personal data, the reasons it is being processed, and whether it will be given to any other organisations or people;
  • provide a copy of the information comprising the data; and details of the source of the data (where this is available).

This will normally be in electronic form if the individual has made a request electronically, unless they agree otherwise.

If the individual wants additional copies, the College may charge a fee that will be based on the administrative cost to the College of providing the additional copies.

To make a subject access request, the individual should send the request to the Data Protection Officer at dpo@rcoa.ac.uk. The DPO will act in accordance with the RCoA’s Subject Access Request Procedure and ask the individual to complete a Subject Access Request Form before the request can be processed. 

8  Information about Examinations

Special rules apply to subject access requests relating to information about the outcome of examinations. These rules apply to requests for examination results, examination scripts or examiners’ comments and are designed to prevent the right of subject access being used as a means of circumventing the College’s processes for announcing results.

Examination Results

In the case of examination results, the period in which the College has to deal with a request for access is extended if the request is made before the results are announced. The College must respond within:

  1. Five months of the date of the request; or
  2. 40 days of the date the results are published, whichever is earlier.

Examination scripts  Examination scripts are exempt from disclosure in the event of a subject access request. Therefore, legally the College has no obligation to provide copies for candidates who ask for them. The College adopts a policy that candidates have no automatic right of access to examination scripts, but a candidate attending an official College guidance interview may be given access to scripts in the presence of and at the discretion of, the interviewing examiner. 

Examiners’ comments  Examiners’ comments are not covered by an exemption and therefore the College will make every effort to ensure that comments are provided to a candidate in line with its examination regulations and when making a SAR. Comments are made in handwriting by the examiner and will therefore be made available in an electronic format. Where comments are potentially illegible, an electronic version and a photocopy of the original handwritten comments will be provided. Equally, where examiners’ comments have been made directly onto the examination script itself, the script will remain exempt but all comments will be reproduced onto a separate electronic version and made available to the individual making the access request.

9  Other Rights

The GDPR provides the following rights for individuals in relation to their personal data: 

  1. Right of access
  2. Right to data portability
  3. Rights in relation to inaccurate personal or incomplete data
  4. Rights to object to or restrict our data processing
  5. Rights to erasure
  6. Right to withdrawal of consent

To ask the College to take any of these steps, the individual should send a request to dpo@rcoa.ac.uk

10  Data security

The College takes the security of personal data seriously. The College has internal policies and controls in place to protect personal data at rest or in transit against loss, accidental destruction, misuse or disclosure, and to ensure that data is not accessed, except by staff in the proper performance of their duties.

Where the College engages third parties to process personal data on its behalf, such parties do so on the basis of written instructions, ie a data sharing agreement and/or under contractual agreement. Third party suppliers are under a duty of confidentiality and are obliged to implement appropriate technical and organisational measures to ensure the security of data.

11  Impact assessments

Some of the processing that the College carries out may result in risks to privacy. Where processing would result in a high risk to individual's rights and freedoms, the College will carry out a Privacy Impact Assessment (PIA) to determine the necessity and proportionality of processing.  This will include considering the purposes for which the activity is carried out, the risks to individuals and the measures that can be put in place to mitigate those risks.

12  International data transfers

The College will not transfer personal data to countries outside the EEA unless there are suitable safeguards, and the country or territory can ensure an adequate level of protection of the rights and freedoms of data subjects in relation to the processing of personal data.

13  Roles and Responsibilities

Individual obligations

Fellows, members, employees and job applicants are responsible for helping the College keep their personal data accurate and up to date. 

Staff may have access to the personal data of other individuals (in the course of their, employment, contract, volunteer period, internship or apprenticeship). Where this is the case, the College relies on individuals to help meet its data protection obligations to staff and to members, customers and clients.

Staff who are processing personal data on behalf of the College are required:

  • to only access data that they have authority to access and only for authorised purposes;
  • not to disclose data except to individuals (whether inside or outside the College) who have appropriate authorisation;
  • to keep data secure (for example by complying with rules on access to premises, computer access, password protection, and secure file storage and destruction);
  • not to remove personal data, or devices containing or that can be used to access personal data, from the College's premises without adopting appropriate security measures (such as encryption and password protection) to secure the data and the device; and
  • not to use personal email addresses to conduct College business.

14  Provision of data to police and other third parties

Specific procedures apply to the provision of data to third parties. Guidance on this is available to staff.

Personal data requests will occasionally be received from the police or the GMC; requests must be made in writing and must be referred to the Data Protection Officer (dpo@rcoa.ac.uk​​​​​​​) for approval. The exemption given to the police and GMC to pursue their enforcement functions does not cover the disclosure of all personal information held on an individual. It only allows the College to release personal information for the stated purpose(s) and only if not releasing it would be likely to prejudice legitimate investigations.

If a subject data request is received from an individual after a personal data request has been made by the police, the relevant police force must be consulted before any decision is made to release details of the personal data request to the individual.

In addition, staff must ensure the following in relation to sharing any personal data with a third party:

  • When bulk sharing personal data with another organisation, advice is routinely sought from the Data Protection Officer and a Data Sharing Agreement (or other such contractual arrangement) is in place.
  • Where personal or sensitive information is being collected for a new operational purpose, the Data Protection Officer should always be informed.
  • Ensure that all requests for disclosures for personal or sensitive information are sent to the Data Protection Officer in the first instance.

15  Data incidents

Potential personal data incidents should be reported immediately to the Data Protection Officer and include details on who reported the incident, a description of the breach (if there has been one), the data involved and the number of people affected. RCoA will keep a log of this information, including any remedial action taken. 

Personal data incidents are classified in the RCoA’s Data Incident Log according to the severity of risk.  Depending on the severity, an incident may be reported to the ICO. This should be done within 72 hours of the RCoA becoming aware of the breach, where feasible.

If the breach is likely to result in a high risk of adversely affecting the rights and freedoms of individuals, the RCoA will inform the affected individuals that there has been a breach and provide them with information about its likely consequences and the mitigation measures taken. Staff should refer to the Personal Data Incident Policy and Management Procedures.

16  Patient Data

For research purposes, the College has access to and/or is a Data Controller for NHS patient data. Separate Information Governance Procedures and policies are available for individual research programmes. For more information, please contact the Data Protection Officer at dpo@rcoa.ac.uk​​​​​​​.

17  Professional Codes of Conduct

All doctors employed by the NHS will be subject to standard NHS confidentiality agreements and be familiar with the GMC’s document on Confidentiality: good practice in handling patient information (2017).

18  Freedom of Information Act 2000

The Freedom of Information Act 2000 makes provision for the disclosure to members of the public information held by public authorities or by persons providing services for them.

The Act does not apply to the RCoA. However, the College’s policy is to provide information to the public unless there is a compelling reason not to do so.  

Any requests for information should be passed to the Data Protection Officer.

19  Training

The College provides information and training to all staff about their data protection responsibilities as part of the induction process and at regular intervals thereafter.

Individuals whose roles require regular access to personal data, or who are responsible for implementing this policy or responding to subject access requests under this policy, will receive additional training to help them understand their duties and how to comply with them.

20  Breach of Policy

Failing to observe these requirements may amount to a disciplinary offence that will be dealt with under the College's disciplinary procedure. Significant or deliberate breaches of this policy, such as accessing employee or members’ data without authorisation or a legitimate reason to do so, may constitute gross misconduct and could lead to dismissal without notice.

If you have any questions or concerns about data protection, please contact our Data Protection Officer, Ian Drayton