Education & Training
Learn more about privacy law in healthcare
November 6, 2024
TORONTO – Globally, in recent years, healthcare has accounted for more privacy breaches than any other industry. The number of incidents continues to rise as healthcare institutions are frequently in the news for mismanaging personal health information.
Breaches and missteps can result in significant reputational risk and institutional liability. Maintaining adequate privacy around health information is a core priority of patients, medical institutions and professionals, software vendors, and clinical researchers.
A web of regulatory instruments and best practices have developed to protect sensitive medical data. These ensure that only those who require access for treatment or research purposes are able to view this most personal category of private information.
Failure to adopt adequate protective initiatives can leave patients vulnerable to the loss of highly sensitive personal information and medical organizations liable for breeches that can lead to class actions and a loss of trust by their patient populations.
Registration includes 120-day unlimited, online access to the recorded program.
What You’ll Learn:
- Demystifying the regulatory landscape: PHIPA, PIPEDA, MFIPPA, FIPPA and other targeted or sector specific laws (such as Public Hospitals Act, Mental Health Act, Health Protection and Promotion Act, Long-Term Care Homes Act etc.) and Privacy Act;
- Strategies and tactics for lost or stolen devices, including best practices for storing data;
- Responding to privacy breaches;
- Creating effective consent directives;
- Managing data sharing agreements with vendors and other patient services;
- Best practices for effective data management and ensuring data integrity;
Program Director
Gillian Kafka
Senior Legal Counsel, Kate Dewhirst Health Law