NHS Doctors Sending Patient Data On Snapchat In Alarming Case Of Shadow IT

Doctors at the NHS are frequently using popular mobile app Snapchat to send pictures of patient scans to each other, a panel of experts has revealed.

In a report commissioned by Google-owned DeepMind Health, the lack of true digital transformation at the UK’s health service has been revealed, highlighting how doctors are circumnavigating processes to get their jobs done more efficiently.

In fact, in a damning verdict, the report goes as far as to conclude that the “digital revolution has largely bypassed the NHS”.

Dr. Snapchat

Perhaps the biggest revelation is that doctors are using smartphone camera apps to quickly record and send patient information, a blase approach to data privacy that will surely leave authorities and members of the public alarmed.

This suggests that, despite attempts by the government to digitise the NHS, it so far appears to be falling short.

“The digital revolution has largely bypassed the NHS, which, in 2017, still retains the dubious title of being the world’s largest purchaser of fax machines,” said the panel’s chair, former Liberal Democrat MP Dr Julian Huppert.

“Many records are insecure, paper-based systems which are unwieldy and difficult to use. Seeing the difference that technology makes in their own lives, clinicians are already manufacturing their own technical fixes.

“They may use Snapchat to send scans from one clinician to another or camera apps to record particular details of patient information in a convenient format. It is difficult to criticise these individuals, given that this makes their job possible. However, this is clearly an insecure, risky, and non-auditable way of operating, and cannot continue.”

Criticism was also leveled at the NHS and DeepMind partnership, which has been condemned in some parts due to the amount of confidential patient data that DeepMind is able to access.

This issue eventually resulted in the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) ruling that the data sharing deal agreed to by the Royal Free NHS Trust was illegal, with Dr Huppert adding that this broken trust “will be difficult to overcome and has the potential to delay or undermine work that could be of great potential benefit to patients”.

Cyber security is also an contentious topic. The NHS is currently being plagued by ransomware attacks, yet is still putting patient data at risk by using outdated Windows XP software across many sites.

How much do you know about privacy? Try our quiz!

Sam Pudwell

Sam Pudwell joined Silicon UK as a reporter in December 2016. As well as being the resident Cloud aficionado, he covers areas such as cyber security, government IT and sports technology, with the aim of going to as many events as possible.

Recent Posts

Spyware Maker NSO Group Found Liable In US Court

Landmark ruling finds NSO Group liable on hacking charges in US federal court, after Pegasus…

2 days ago

Microsoft Diversifying 365 Copilot Away From OpenAI

Microsoft reportedly adding internal and third-party AI models to enterprise 365 Copilot offering as it…

2 days ago

Albania Bans TikTok For One Year After Stabbing

Albania to ban access to TikTok for one year after schoolboy stabbed to death, as…

2 days ago

Foldable Shipments Slow In China Amidst Global Growth Pains

Shipments of foldable smartphones show dramatic slowdown in world's biggest smartphone market amidst broader growth…

2 days ago

Google Proposes Remedies After Antitrust Defeat

Google proposes modest remedies to restore search competition, while decrying government overreach and planning appeal

2 days ago

Sega Considers Starting Own Game Subscription Service

Sega 'evaluating' starting its own game subscription service, as on-demand business model makes headway in…

2 days ago