DSB (Austria) - 2021-0.820.321: Difference between revisions
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The Austrian DPA (DSB) held that the Disciplinary Council of the Austrian Medical Association violated a data subject's right to secrecy by sharing their name to the doctor they reported to the body. | |||
== English Summary == | == English Summary == | ||
=== Facts === | === Facts === | ||
- | The complainant is a data subject who learned a general practitioner was spreading misinformation about COVID-19 by displaying booklets containing non-scientific and partially conspirational information in their practice. The complainant reported the doctor to the Medical Association for Lower Austria, attaching a picture of the booklets as evidence. This body forwarded the complaint to the Disciplinary Council of the Austrian Medical Association to begin an inquiry into the matter. | ||
The Council then notified the practitioner that was complained about about the inquiry. In doing so it attached the original (non-redacted) email from the complainant, de facto revealing their identity to the practitioner. | |||
Thus, they complained to the Austrian DPA about a violation of their right to secrecy under §1 DSG. | |||
=== Holding === | === Holding === | ||
The DSB assessed whether the Disciplinary Council of the Austrian Medical Association violated the complainant's right to secrecy by sharing their name to the doctor they reported to the body. | |||
The Disciplinary Council of the Austrian Medical Association argued the transfer of personal data to the practitioner was lawful under §153(4) of the national 'Ärztegesetz' ('Doctor Law'). The DSB disagreed, stating the forwarding of the complainant's name does not comply with the principle of data minimisation. | |||
Thus, the DSB held that the Disciplinary Council of the Austrian Medical Association violated a data subject's right to secrecy by sharing the email containing their name to the doctor they reported. | |||
== Comment == | == Comment == |
Revision as of 14:53, 6 December 2021
DSB (Austria) - 2021-0.820.321 | |
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Authority: | DSB (Austria) |
Jurisdiction: | Austria |
Relevant Law: | Article 51(1) GDPR Article 57(1)(f) GDPR Article 77(1) GDPR §1 DSG §18(1) DSG §24(1) DSG §24(5) DSG |
Type: | Complaint |
Outcome: | Upheld |
Started: | |
Decided: | 24.11.2021 |
Published: | |
Fine: | None |
Parties: | Disziplinarrat der Österreichischen Ärztekammer |
National Case Number/Name: | 2021-0.820.321 |
European Case Law Identifier: | n/a |
Appeal: | n/a |
Original Language(s): | [[:Category:{{{Original_Source_Language_1}}}|{{{Original_Source_Language_1}}}]] [[Category:{{{Original_Source_Language_1}}}]] |
Original Source: | [{{{Original_Source_Link_1}}} {{{Original_Source_Name_1}}} (in {{{Original_Source_Language__Code_1}}})] |
Initial Contributor: | n/a |
The Austrian DPA (DSB) held that the Disciplinary Council of the Austrian Medical Association violated a data subject's right to secrecy by sharing their name to the doctor they reported to the body.
English Summary
Facts
The complainant is a data subject who learned a general practitioner was spreading misinformation about COVID-19 by displaying booklets containing non-scientific and partially conspirational information in their practice. The complainant reported the doctor to the Medical Association for Lower Austria, attaching a picture of the booklets as evidence. This body forwarded the complaint to the Disciplinary Council of the Austrian Medical Association to begin an inquiry into the matter.
The Council then notified the practitioner that was complained about about the inquiry. In doing so it attached the original (non-redacted) email from the complainant, de facto revealing their identity to the practitioner.
Thus, they complained to the Austrian DPA about a violation of their right to secrecy under §1 DSG.
Holding
The DSB assessed whether the Disciplinary Council of the Austrian Medical Association violated the complainant's right to secrecy by sharing their name to the doctor they reported to the body.
The Disciplinary Council of the Austrian Medical Association argued the transfer of personal data to the practitioner was lawful under §153(4) of the national 'Ärztegesetz' ('Doctor Law'). The DSB disagreed, stating the forwarding of the complainant's name does not comply with the principle of data minimisation.
Thus, the DSB held that the Disciplinary Council of the Austrian Medical Association violated a data subject's right to secrecy by sharing the email containing their name to the doctor they reported.
Comment
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English Machine Translation of the Decision
The decision below is a machine translation of the German original. Please refer to the German original for more details.
Page 1 Barichgasse 40-42 A-1030 Vienna Tel .: + 43-1-52152 302560 Email: dsb@dsb.gv.at GZ: D124.3487 Clerk: REDACTEDREDACTED 2021-0.820.321 REDACTEDREDACTED Data protection complaint (confidentiality) REDACTEDREDACTED / Disciplinary Council of the Austrian Medical Association by email REDACTEDREDACTED NOTICE SPEECH The data protection authority decides on the data protection complaint of REDACTEDREDACTED (Complainant) of January 13, 2021 against the Disciplinary Council of the Austrian Medical Association (Respondent) for a breach of the right to secrecy as follows: - The appeal is allowed and it is found that the respondent denies Has violated the complainant's right to secrecy by submitting the Name of the complainant in the course of disciplinary proceedings to the accused doctor forwarded. Legal basis: Article 51 (1), Article 57 (1) (f) and Article 77 (1) of Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation, hereinafter: GDPR), OJ No. L 119 of 4.5.2016 p. 1; §§ 1, 18 Paragraph 1 and 24 Paragraph 1 and Paragraph 5 of the Data Protection Act (DSG), Federal Law Gazette I No. 165/1999 as amended; §§ 151 Paragraph 4 and 153 Paragraph 4 of the Federal Act on the Practice of the Medical Profession and the Professional representation of doctors (Ärztegesetz 1998 - ÄrzteG 1998), Federal Law Gazette I. No. 169/1998 as amended; § 17 des General Administrative Procedure Act 1991 (AVG), Federal Law Gazette No. 51/1991 as amended. Page 2 - 2 - REASON A. Arguments of the parties and course of the procedure In its submission of January 13, 2021 and its opinion of March 10, 2021 to the data protection authority essentially that the respondent had a Email in which the complainant addressed to the competent medical association Initiated disciplinary proceedings against a doctor due to possible misconduct, forwarded unredacted to the doctor concerned as part of a file inspection. This is true his email address but not his name has been deleted. Unlike the respondent citing requires Section 153 (4) of the Doctors Act if interpreted in accordance with Union law and constitutional law under no circumstances that personal data of the reporter as part of the file inspection for Are to be made available. Section 52 (2) of the Code of Criminal Procedure permits in judicial criminal proceedings to exclude the personal data of a reporter from the inspection of files. Nothing else could apply to mere disciplinary proceedings. The identity of the reporter is also for the accused doctor completely irrelevant. It was not the intention of the complainant to contact the specific doctor accuse why he had given her name in brackets only as an example, he had many more to general misconduct through dissemination of pseudoscientific and want to point out conspiracy theoretic claims by doctors in times of a pandemic. The respondent also had to assume that an unnecessary and avoidable Disclosure of personal data is generally a disadvantage within the meaning of Section 17 (3) AVG. The respondent replied with an opinion of February 11, 2021 summarized that The complainant's message was forwarded to the disciplinary attorney in accordance with Section 150 ÄrtzeG 1998 which then submitted an application to the Disciplinary Board to conduct surveys have. The accused was from the initiation of investigations according to § 151 Abs. 4 ÄrzteG 1998 stating the name of the investigator and the main reasons for suspicion communicate. This was substantive by sending the complainant's email to the accused doctor takes place, with the e-mail address of the complainant prior to the transmission had been blackened. According to the Doctors Act, the respondent also has an obligation to do so Guarantee of access to files, since Section 153 (4) DoctorsG 1998 regulates that the notification of the Complainant to the accused doctor to this in a fair trial make it possible to examine all allegations made against them and to take action on their own Take defense. Section 17 AVG also standardizes such a legal obligation. One There is no statutory exception to the inspection of files in the present case. It have the complainant must also be aware that his data may be used for the Execution of the suggested procedure would be processed. Page 3 - 3 - B. Subject matter of the complaint Based on the submissions of the complainant, it emerges that the subject of the complaint is the question is whether the respondent thereby exercising his right to secrecy violated by submitting the complainant's name to the forwarded the accused doctor. C. Factual Findings The complainant learned that a general practitioner in Amstetten was in her ordination supposedly unscientific and partly conspiracy-theoretical views regarding COVID-19 disseminated by placing appropriate information at the reception desk for their patients would have. On March 13, 2020, the complainant reported the doctor's alleged misconduct by email to the Medical Association for Lower Austria and attached a photo of the Information that was required by the doctor at the reception desk. The Medical Association for Lower Austria then forwarded this email to the disciplinary attorney, which subsequently, based on the complainant's email, with the respondent submitted an application for the investigator to conduct surveys. In May 2020, the respondent informed the accused doctor about the implementation of Surveys as part of a disciplinary procedure and informed her, sending the E-mails from the complainant containing the allegations made against them. The accused doctor did not request access to the files. From the email sent, the name of the complainant was for the accused doctor evident. Assessment of evidence: The findings made are based on what is consistent in this respect Arguments of the parties. D. From a legal point of view, it follows: According to Section 1, Paragraph 1 of the Data Protection Act, everyone has the right to secrecy about those who concern them personal data insofar as there is a legitimate interest in it. The existence of one such interest is excluded if data is due to their general availability or because of their lack of traceability to the data subject not a claim to confidentiality are accessible. Page 4 - 4 - The GDPR and in particular the principles anchored in it are for the interpretation of the law to take into account confidentiality (see the decision of the DSB of October 31, 2018, GZ DSBD123.076 / 0003-DSB / 2018). In the case at hand, the scope of application of Section 1 (1) DSG is opened, since it is the Name of the complainant undisputed about a personal date according to Art. 4 Z 1 GDPR acts. Restrictions on the right to secrecy are permitted in accordance with Section 1 (2) DSG if personal data are used in the vital interest of the data subject Affected party has given their consent (or in the terminology of the GDPR: consent) if a qualified legal basis for the use exists, or if the use by overriding legitimate interests of a third party are justified. According to Section 1, Paragraph 2, last sentence, leg. Cit. may encroachment on the The fundamental right to data protection can only be exercised in the mildest way that leads to the goal. Based on the subject matter of the complaint, the question arises whether the respondent does Unlawfully passed the name of the complainant on to the accused doctor. The objective use of the data was not in the vital interest of the Complainant and neither was his consent available. Rather, the respondent bases the transfer of the proceedings, on the one hand, on § 151, Paragraph 4 of the Doctors Act 1998 and, on the other hand, the right to inspect files in accordance with Section 153, Paragraph 4 of the Doctors Act 1998 or § 17 AVG. The provision of Section 151, Paragraph 4 of the ÄrzteG 1998 reads as follows ( emphasized by the Data protection authority ): § 151. (4) If the disciplinary committee decides to conduct surveys, the chairman has the investigating officer to carry out the surveys he deems necessary instruct the accused, stating the name of the Investigator and the main grounds for suspicion as well as the disciplinary attorney communicate. Insofar as the respondent relies on this provision, he fails to recognize that the The name of the investigating officer is to be forwarded to the accused, but not that of the Scoreboard. Also the name of the scoreboard is not one of the main reasons for suspicion subsume or significantly for the clarification of the alleged misconduct, especially such Misconduct was substantively based not on a doctor-patient relationship, but on oneself on, information available in the doctor's office of the accused doctor relates to the COVID 19 pandemic relates. Page 5 - 5 - This information, which represents the alleged misconduct of the accused doctor, were also documented by means of a photograph and by the complainant of his complaint attached. The forwarding of the complainant's name also does not comply with the principle of Data minimization and is to be seen objectively as excessive, especially since the interference is not in the the least possible type has been carried out (Section 1 (2) last sentence DSG). With constitutional To proceed, the respondent would have the accused doctor about the essentials Be able to report suspicious facts without disclosing the name of the complainant, especially since the announcement of the name for the clarification of the alleged misconduct in the present case is not required. The respondent also cannot rely on the right to inspect files under Section 153 (4) DoctorsG 1998 and § 17 AVG because - as stated - the transfer of the name is not in the In the course of an inspection of the files requested by the accused doctor. The use of the right to inspect files does not make a formal request, but it does but a concrete request to inspect the files of a certain procedure (cf. Hengstschläger / Leeb , AVG § 17, margin no. 6 (status 1.1.2014, rdb.at)). A specific one is therefore required Request to inspect the files, which the accused doctor did not, however, and was also not alleged by the respondent. Rather, the name of the Complainant proactively by the respondent in the course of the communication according to § 151 Paragraph 4 of the Doctors Act and thus made available to the accused doctor. The judgment however, the need to inspect the files is not incumbent on the respondent, but solely on the Party, ie. the accused doctor (see Hengstschläger / Leeb , AVG § 17, margin no.3 (as of 01/01/2014, rdb.at)). The right to inspect files also does not pursue the purpose of proactively forwarding parts of the files to the parties but should allow the parties to inspect the files - also in order to guarantee equality of arms - only give the opportunity to gain direct insight into the results of the To form an opinion yourself during the preliminary investigation process and thus to have precise knowledge of the course of the Procedure and the basis for decision-making (see Hengstschläger / Leeb , AVG § 17, margin no.1 (As of January 1, 2014, rdb.at). But even if the accused doctor had requested access to the files, it should still be noted that Page 6 - 6 - Section 17 (3) AVG provides for certain restrictions on this right of inspection. Excepted from the Inspection are file components in particular if the inspection is certain legitimate Conflicting interests, whereby the Respondent has the interest of the party in the Inspection of files with regard to their purpose against the legitimate interests of other parties or third parties (here: the complainant) has to weigh up in the individual case (cf. for example the decision of the VwGH of May 22, 2012, 2009/04/0187 and from April 9, 2013, 2011/04/0207). Objective, however, was on that Restrictions of Section 17 (3) AVG and those made by the respondent Consideration, in the absence of a file inspection by the accused doctor, not to go into detail. As a result, the respondent's disclosure of his name creates a Violation of the complainant's right to secrecy and was thus to decide according to the ruling. Legal remedies You can lodge a written complaint against this notification within four weeks of delivery to the Federal Administrative Court. The complaint is with the data protection authority bring in and must - the name of the contested decision (GZ, subject) - the name of the authority concerned, - the reasons on which the allegation of illegality is based, - the desire as well - the information required to assess whether the complaint has been submitted in good time, contain. The data protection authority has the option to either through within two months The preliminary decision on the complaint to change your decision or the complaint with the files of the Procedure to be submitted to the Federal Administrative Court . The complaint against this decision is subject to a fee. The fixed fee for a the corresponding entry including attachments is 30 euros . The fee is stating the To be paid for the purpose of use to the account of the Austrian tax office. The fee is generally to be transferred electronically using the “tax office payment” function. as The recipient is to indicate the Austrian Tax Office - Special Responsibilities Office or (IBAN: AT83 0100 0000 0550 4109, BIC: BUNDATWW). Furthermore they are Tax number / tax account number 10 999/9102, the tax type "EEE complaint fee", the State the date of the decision as the period and the amount. Page 7 - 7 - If the e-banking system of your bank does not have the "tax office payment" function, the eps procedure can be used in FinanzOnline. From an electronic transfer can can only be waived if no e-banking system has been used so far (even if the Taxpayer has an internet connection). Payment must then be made by means of Payment instructions take place, paying attention to the correct allocation. additional Information can be obtained from the tax office and in the manual “ Electronic payment and reporting for payment of Self-assessment taxes ". The fee is paid when the complaint is lodged with the data protection authority by means of a payment receipt to be added to the entry or a printout of which has been made Evidence of issuing a payment order . If the fee is not or not completely is paid, a report is sent to the responsible tax office . Has a timely and admissible complaint to the Federal Administrative Court suspensive effect . The suspensive effect can be excluded in the ruling of the decision have been or have been excluded by a separate decision. November 24, 2021 For the head of the data protection authority: REDACTEDREDACTED