Research Studies
The staff at this practice record information about you and your health so that you can receive the right care and treatment. We need to record this information, together with the details of the care you receive, because it may be needed if we see you again.
We may use some of this information for other reasons, for example, to help us to protect the health of the general public generally, to plan for the future, to train staff and to carry out medical and other health research for the benefit of everyone.
We are currently involved in research studies for which we provide anonymised information from patients’ notes. You cannot be identified in any way from this information as none of your personal details are given to researchers. Individual patients’ records are added into a much larger anonymous database, containing records from millions of patients across the UK. This information is used by researchers outside this practice.
The databases to which we contribute anonymised records are managed by companies outside the NHS which do not have access to your personal details, only to anonymous medical records.
The data is used for research into such topics as drug safety, disease patterns, prescribing patterns, health economics and public health. Many of these studies provide useful information to medical staff on diseases, the use of drugs or outcomes of disease or treatment. These studies may be performed by academic researchers or commercial companies amongst others. However, no researcher has accesst o your full details such as your name and address, initials or your full date of birth. The researchers are not given information on the GP nor the practice name, address or post code.
If you would like to opt out of this data collection scheme, please let your doctor know and no data from your records will be collected or used in research. This will not affect your care in any way.
If anything to do with the research would require that you provide additional information about yourself,you will be contacted by the practice to see if you are willing to take part; you will not be identified in any published results.
Note that you have a right of access to your health records.
If at any time you would like to know more, or have any concerns about how we use your information, you can speak to your GP or the Practice Manager.