• @[email protected]
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    7 months ago

    To be fair, you could have the best doctor in the world. The second they enter those dates into the database with the rest of your notes it is out of their hands. The IT department will be responsible for handing over the data.

    • @[email protected]
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      7 months ago

      The IT department would never be responsible for handing over said data. Backing it up, making sure it was recoverable, sure. But IT would have no actions with such.

      I assume it would be the HR department or the administrators

        • @[email protected]
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          147 months ago

          And they will not. You no nothing about IT do you? All obligations and no pay grade. Never does IT go outside their poor ass pay. HR (Legal) as you say, will have to transfer it. Not in our pay grade

          • Flying Squid
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            187 months ago

            You’re talking as if there are no MAGA assholes and corporate cocksuckers that work in IT. I hate to break it to you…

          • @[email protected]
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            17 months ago

            You no nothing about IT do you?

            I’m not convinced you do, if you genuinely can’t imagine a scenario where someone with just enough permissions could be convinced to do this, legally or otherwise.

      • @[email protected]
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        27 months ago

        We all know there are incompetent people in human resources who will turn to their tech person and ask them to do the job. The tech person won’t even think twice about the actual intended use of the data that they’re sharing.

    • @[email protected]
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      747 months ago

      This.

      I have a (well managed) chronic illness. I have to go to lots of doctors at different clinics. All of them are in the habit of just collecting all the information.

      For example, as a patient, there’s no benefit to me whatsoever of the doctor being aware of the day and month of my birth. That’s just the start though, they have my medical concession id number, addresses, et cetera.

      If you express any reluctance at all, you’re made to feel like a pariah. Like a COVID denier or something. For example, there was one clinic I want sure I would continue with, so when I was asked to fill out my details I asked whether it was really necessary given that I might not come on board as a patient, the receptionist and doctor just couldn’t understand why I might be reluctant.

      Last time I saw my GP he asked whether he could record our conversation… “it’s some AI thing we’re trialling”. OMFG. Why on earth would I want that? Why would anyone want that? I want my GP who is an actual person to listen to my circumstances and determine the best course of action.

      • @[email protected]
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        737 months ago

        Day and Month of Birth is a basic check to see if you are who you say you are, if you are refusing to give even basic details like that I can see why the medical staff who deal with you would give you confused/annoyed expressions

        • @[email protected]
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          187 months ago

          Well, yea, but we shouldn’t use it for that either.

          Google found my day and month of birth in about 3 seconds, and it’s entirely because of this “collect everything” behavior.

          • @[email protected]
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            147 months ago

            Same with social security numbers. I’ve lost count of all the sites I’ve had to enter it in over the years, at this point I just assume all of my info is available to a motivated search

        • @[email protected]
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          117 months ago

          To be clear, I don’t refuse to provide my Day and Month of Birth, simply because I don’t want to be some kind of privacy pariah.

          That said, while it may have been a reasonable point of ID in the 90s, I don’t believe that remains the case in 2024.

          The basic concept of Australian Privacy Legislation is that organisations ought to collect only that information which they require, and they should disclose the reason why they are collecting that data.

          If the only reason to collect ones Day and Month of birth is so I can repeat it back and confirm it later then that seems very pointless to me. There are other details which they do require which can be used to confirm my identity.

          • Schadrach
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            117 months ago

            That said, while it may have been a reasonable point of ID in the 90s, I don’t believe that remains the case in 2024.

            It’s useful for quickly disambiguating between multiple people with the same name though - the odds that two people with the same name and date of birth are using the same provider on the same day are low enough to consider it useful.

            • @[email protected]
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              17 months ago

              I’m certain that fewer than 0.1% of patients at a small medical clinic would share the same first and last names. In those cases, you could differentiate by address and age if necessary.

              • @[email protected]
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                27 months ago

                This falls into a “if it aint broke, dont fix it” kind of thing. Month and Year Birthdate are fairly low privacy info that everyone remembers and are used to giving out" it gets used for so many different checks because we all have the understanding that we give this info out to businesses that need them, switching to other things that in a vacuum would be a better fit in that one specific category in only a tiny amount just isnt worth the confusion and pushback that changing it would cause.

                • @[email protected]
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                  17 months ago

                  It is broken though.

                  You only feel like DoB is low level personal information because you tell it to everyone. According to Australian Provacy Principles it’s “sensitive” which means it should only be collected when required.

                  At my podiatrists office it’s simply not required.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    7 months ago

                    And EVERYONE has told it to everyone for generations now, which MAKES it low level. This is not a battle worth fighting as it was lost before your grandparents were born and there are numerous other ways we could make society better that would have a lot more impact than your dentist no longer asking what year you were born

              • Schadrach
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                17 months ago

                I think you underestimate how common the most common first and last names are. In an even small city you are likely to see repeats of the most common names.

                  • Schadrach
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                    17 months ago

                    Yes, uniquely identifying the patient is important, especially for pharmacies where people with the same name might receive different doses of the same drug or receive similar sounding drugs that the patient might not catch.

                    What would you suggest? It needs to be a piece of information that is probably unique when paired with name at least as far as the local area, that absolutely everyone has, that the pharmacy and doctor both have and is unlikely to change (to avoid issues where records in one place are updated before the other).

          • @[email protected]
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            97 months ago

            Which other identifiers would you feel comfortable confirming? Is there a reason you think DoB is dangerous to share?

            • @[email protected]
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              27 months ago

              DoB is considered sensitive personal information in the Australian Privacy Act.

              Other identifiers might be street number or last three digits of phone number.

              • @[email protected]
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                27 months ago

                Interesting. Asking because I work in a hospital (in America tho) and making our patients more comfortable is better for everyone. We do serve a lot of homeless people tho, so for that we would probably still need to ask DoB since we need to verify two identifiers.

                • @[email protected]
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                  17 months ago

                  Firstly, I’m a weirdo and my preferences aren’t indicative of “what makes people comfortable” generally.

                  Secondly, in some cases DoB is really just a code number. Over the last year I’ve started providing an incorrect DoB at new clinics I attend. It’s never caused any problems. As long as I can provide the right code number when asked it has served its purpose.

          • @[email protected]
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            27 months ago

            When I donate blood, they ask me for that info like 3 or 4 times throughout the process. While it probably doesn’t apply to a regular doctors visit, I think it’s also used to gauge if you are alert and your memory is good.

      • @[email protected]
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        247 months ago

        The AI thing is probably for the doctor to have a summary at the end, notes without needing to type them.

      • @[email protected]
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        207 months ago

        I’m always in a “Grab any data that might be useful” mood at the doctor’s office. I’ve had teams of trainees brought into my room to show off any medical problems I have. I love supporting the medical field however I can. My mom was in a relatively famous medical video ages ago and such.

        But if a doctor asked me to train his AI I’d tell him to fuck right off. No way, no how.

      • @person420
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        97 months ago

        Worth mentioning but health screening is a great use of AI.

        • @[email protected]
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          97 months ago

          Also worth mentioning.

          Ask for fucking consent.

          AI model training is off the fucking rails right now and we really need laws and lawsuits to punish assholes.

            • @[email protected]
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              67 months ago

              Sorry, maybe I should clarify that to “informed consent” - if someone shoves an eighty page ToS in front of you to use the services of their private hospital you may be giving consent technically but it’s not informed consent.

            • @[email protected]
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              17 months ago

              If “them” means me… no my GP didn’t ask me to fill out a form authorising the recording.

              It seemed obvious to me that GP didn’t really know much about it, like how data stored, how data used, et cetera.

          • @person420
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            37 months ago

            Are you just randomly reading comments and replying? This literal thread is about a doctor who asked a patient for consent to record their session so they could use it to train an AI.

          • @FanBlade
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            97 months ago

            Must have been built in House

        • @[email protected]
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          47 months ago

          I think this statement is far too broad.

          It might be good to have AI review some imaging someone has had done to examine some particular ailment.

          It’s definitely not good to have a LLM review conversations with my GP and send me targeted marketing for “potential” ailments.

          • @person420
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            47 months ago

            It is, it was a bit terse, you’re right.

            A potential fantastic use of AI is to scan a person’s medical records against the vast medical knowledge humans have gathered over the past century or so to help doctors identify problems quicker and with more accuracy.

            While the general purpose AI’s we use today can’t be trusted to diagnose anything (but I’d argue they can assist a competent doctor) a future specific purpose AI that’s tailored to that task could revolutionize diagnosis. And with the rate AI is going (even if people like Sam Altman are stretching truths) it’s not a too distant future.

      • thermal_shock
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        57 months ago

        man, id hate to have you as a client. I’m all for privacy and not wasting time, but you’re just unbearable in this regard.