PERSONAL HEALTH INFORMATION PRIVACY ACT, 2000 / LOI DE 2000 SUR LA CONFIDENTIALITÉ DES RENSEIGNEMENTS PERSONNELS SUR LA SANTÉ

SUDBURY AND DISTRICT MEDICAL SOCIETY

PATRICIA HATALA

INTERCILIUM

MAVIS LIPMAN

SURVIVORS OF MEDICAL ABUSE

ONTARIO ASSOCIATION OF OPTOMETRISTS

OMBUDSMAN ONTARIO

INFORMATION AND PRIVACY COMMISSIONER/ONTARIO

INSURANCE BUREAU OF CANADA

GEORGE HENRY

CANADIAN CIVIL LIBERTIES ASSOCIATION

TORONTO ASSOCIATION FOR COMMUNITY LIVING
ONTARIO ASSOCIATION FOR COMMUNITY LIVING
ONTARIO AGENCIES SUPPORTING INDIVIDUALS WITH SPECIAL NEEDS

DAVID PRICHARD

ONTARIO HIV TREATMENT NETWORK

CONTENTS

Thursday 1 March 2001

Personal Health Information Privacy Act, 2000, Bill 159, Mrs Witmer / Loi de 2000 sur la confidentialité des renseignements personnels sur la santé, projet de loi 159, Mme Witmer

Sudbury and District Medical Society
Dr Rayudu Koka
Dr Chris McKibbon
Dr Pierre Bonin

Ms Patricia Hatala

Intercilium
Dr Samuel Berger

Ms Mavis Lipman

Survivors of Medical Abuse
Ms Josie MacPherson

Ontario Association of Optometrists
Dr Christopher Nicol

Ombudsman Ontario
Mr Clare Lewis

Information and Privacy Commissioner/Ontario
Dr Ann Cavoukian

Insurance Bureau of Canada
Mr Mark Yakabuski

Mr George Henry

Canadian Civil Liberties Association
Mr Stephen McCammon

Toronto Association for Community Living; Ontario Association for Community Living; Ontario Agencies Supporting Individuals with Special Needs
Mr Gordon Kyle
Mr Bill Barber

Mr David Prichard

Ontario HIV Treatment Network
Ms Patricia Balogh
Mr Ed McDonnell

STANDING COMMITTEE ON GENERAL GOVERNMENT

Chair / Président
Mr Steve Gilchrist (Scarborough East / -Est PC)

Vice-Chair / Vice-Présidente

Mrs Julia Munro (York North / -Nord PC)

Mr Toby Barrett (Norfolk PC)
Mrs Marie Bountrogianni (Hamilton Mountain L)
Mr Ted Chudleigh (Halton PC)
Mr Garfield Dunlop (Simcoe North / -Nord PC)
Mr Steve Gilchrist (Scarborough East / -Est PC)
Mr Dave Levac (Brant L)
Mr Rosario Marchese (Trinity-Spadina ND)
Mrs Julia Munro (York North / -Nord PC)

Substitutions / Membres remplaçants

Mr Raminder Gill (Bramalea-Gore-Malton-Springdale PC)
Mr Bert Johnson (Perth-Middlesex PC)
Ms Frances Lankin (Beaches-East York ND)
Mr Gerry Martiniuk (Cambridge PC)
Mrs Lyn McLeod (Thunder Bay-Atikokan L)
Mrs Sandra Pupatello (Windsor West / -Ouest L)
Mr Bob Wood (London West / -Ouest PC)

Clerk / Greffière

Ms Anne Stokes

Staff /Personnel

Mr Andrew McNaught, research officer,
Research and Information Services

The committee met at 0900 in room 151.

PERSONAL HEALTH INFORMATION PRIVACY ACT, 2000 / LOI DE 2000 SUR LA CONFIDENTIALITÉ DES RENSEIGNEMENTS PERSONNELS SUR LA SANTÉ

Consideration of Bill 159, An Act respecting personal health information and related matters / Projet de loi 159, Loi concernant les renseignements personnels sur la santé et traitant de questions connexes.

The Chair (Mr Steve Gilchrist): I call the committee to order, as we continue our hearings on Bill 159, An Act respecting personal health information and related matters. We're very pleased this morning to be reaching out to the far reaches of the province.

Ms Frances Lankin (Beaches-East York): Sudbury's not that far.

The Chair: It gets farther than that, though, in the next group. We're very pleased to have some deputations from different sites all across Ontario. I would say to the committee members there is a bit of a time lag. As we each speak, there's a bit of a lag getting that message out to the other end, so I would ask you to respect that when we're into the question-and-answer period. Just allow a little bit of time after your question or else we'll be talking over each other.

SUDBURY AND DISTRICT MEDICAL SOCIETY

The Chair: With that, we'd like to welcome to the hearings the Sudbury and District Medical Society. Good morning. The floor is yours for the next 20 minutes.

Dr Rayudu Koka: Thank you, Mr Chairman and members of the standing committee. We are extremely pleased that you gave us the opportunity to be able to express our concerns and our views on this very important bill. My name is Rayudu Koka. I am the president of the Sudbury and District Medical Society. I have been a practising psychiatrist in this community for the last 15 years. I have with me two colleagues: Dr Pierre Bonin, who is the vice-president of our medical society and a family physician; I also have, to my right, Dr Chris McKibbon, who is a rheumatologist and has also been active in our society as past president and also as an OMA board member.

With this introduction, I would like to let my colleague, Dr McKibbon, present the information and our issues, and then we'll go on from there.

Dr Chris McKibbon: Mr Chairman, honourable members, fellow citizens, I want to thank you for the opportunity to respond to Bill 159, the Personal Health Information Privacy Act. I'm Dr Chris McKibbon and I'm a practising physician specializing in the treatment of people who are struggling with arthritis and rheumatism. Like you, I'm a representative. I'm elected by physicians in northeastern Ontario to represent them on the board of directors of the Ontario Medical Association.

I'd like to begin by saying something surprising, even provocative, and that is that we need legislation dealing with personal health information privacy. We live in an age when information is constantly being collected. Marketing agencies are gathering information about our personal preferences, our tastes and our habits. Financial institutions are maintaining records about our economic transactions. Political parties of all persuasions are tracking us relentlessly. Statisticians are gathering data as squirrels gather nuts. Never has personal privacy been under such unrelenting attack.

Never before have we had the capacity to know so much, particularly in medicine. We stand just inside the door of unravelling the genetic code, with all of the possibilities and pitfalls that entails. We're well along the road of peering into the human body using sophisticated diagnostic imaging and even more extensive laboratory technology. We have increasing capacity to store, to link and to share information. As this capability increases, we need legislative boundaries to protect personal privacy.

The practice of medicine is rooted in trust, in a very special relationship between a physician and a patient in the confidence that you can share with your physician your darkest fears, your deepest secrets, your worst indiscretions, confident that when personally, physically or emotionally vulnerable, you will be neither violated nor betrayed. Bill 159 places this special relationship at risk, and it does so in many different ways.

Firstly, it does so by allowing unfettered access to identifiable patient data. I can't imagine any situation in which governmental or bureaucratic needs justify direct access to a patient's chart. Planning requirements are predicated on an appreciation of the status of populations, not individual persons. Where there are questions of fraud or quality of care at issue, access to information necessary to look into those things is obtainable by means that are already available: a court-ordered warrant or an audit conducted under the oversight of a profession's regulatory body.

Secondly, Bill 159 excessively expands the list of those who are entitled to access to personal health information and fails to qualitatively differentiate between them. Surely we can develop legislation which recognizes the differences in the information needs of those who intend direct benefit to patient care and those whose needs for health information are not so specifically and personally directed. Clearly, the needs of a podiatrist making footwear for one of my arthritic patients are different from the needs of one of my psychiatric colleagues treating the same patient's depression, and the needs of a health planner are different yet still. By not clearly differentiating among those who might potentially have access to sensitive information, the legislation undermines the trust and confidence that's fundamental to the physician-patient relationship.

Finally, I'm concerned about the bill's direction with regard to regulation of how patient information will be coded or stored. While it is true that development needs to proceed on a core data set and a common strategy that allows for sharing essential information using new developments in information technology, the bill does not seem to set the limits necessary so as to permit the acquisition and transmission of only that data which is relevant to the particular patient's care at a particular time. There does not seem to be a strategy for the patient to identify and protect his or her record from transmission or adequate encouragement for clinicians or so-called custodians to exercise judgment in sharing some, but not all, of the information that may have been disclosed or discovered within the context of that privileged relationship.

This committee will know that the people of the province want less government, not more. My patients and my colleagues are genuinely concerned about what they perceive as both a real and potential intrusion into one of the most privileged and private relationships. They understand, too, that an efficient and effective health care system needs legislation which facilitates communication and coordinates care. But they demand that the balance favours the protection of their privacy.

Governments should be congratulated for having the courage to ask tough questions about difficult issues. I would return to the statement with which I began: we need legislation dealing with personal health information privacy. Unfortunately, while it begins to address the right questions and shows courage in doing so, it doesn't give us the answers that we need to move forward. We need to recommit ourselves to working collaboratively toward the development of new personal health information legislation which will protect our privacy, deserve our patient's confidence and enhance our ability to deliver care.

I want to thank you for the opportunity to speak to you today. I'd certainly welcome the chance to respond to any questions after my colleagues have had a chance to present.

Dr Koka: Mr Chairman, now I would like to request-sorry, can you hear us?

The Chair: Yes, we can.

Dr Koka: I would like to now request my friend, Pierre Bonin, to do his presentation and then we'll take it after.

Dr Pierre Bonin: I'm Dr Pierre Bonin, a family physician and also vice-president of the Sudbury and District Medical Society. First, I'd like to respectfully thank the members of the committee for granting me the opportunity to speak on this delicate subject. I don't pretend to be as eloquent a speaker as our president, Dr Schumacher. I can only offer you my thoughts and echo the OMA's position.

This is going to sound cliché, but I'm not a health information custodian; I'm simply a doctor from northern Ontario. I appreciate the changing environment we practise in and the need to share electronic information, and also that changes need to be made to the legislation. But this bill goes too far.

We, as citizens, need privacy legislation. Bill 159's intent is good, but it is not pointed enough. We need to define limits on what information the government can obtain. We need to be very sensitive to the possibility of abuse. This law is structured in such a way that fundamentally changes the trust relationship between the patient and his doctor. This is the cornerstone to any successful patient-doctor relationship. At the end of the day, the patient must trust his doctor, rather than wonder which of a long list of custodians may use his private information and for what purpose. People disclose things to me that are very sensitive because they know that it affects both their mental and physical health. Physicians have an interest in that information and a duty to protect their patients' confidentiality.

I'm not clear what is deigned with this notion of health information custodian. I don't believe for a minute that the Ministry of Health requires identifiable patient information for planning and management purposes. I think that it is dangerous to allow government to be in a position where it can direct, ie, force, the delivery of sensitive patient information to government. Any release of identifiable patient information is an affront to the trust patients place in their physicians.

0910

Although I think physicians would generally agree that patients should have the right to know how their information will be used and to consent to uses beyond the direct provision of health care services, Bill 159 raises some practical questions.

Bill 159 adopts the approach to informed consent that is found in Ontario's Health Care Consent Act. On the surface that seems reasonable, but as a practising physician I'm not sure how I'm supposed to know, never mind explain, all the possible uses to which the information may ever be put. There is a key difference between consent to treatment-what I know about the risks and benefits of the medication that I'm recommending-and being responsible to describe or justify the dozens or hundreds of legitimate disclosures that Bill 159 would allow. It's not reasonable to require me, as a physician, to anticipate what might happen to the information after it leaves my control. If the government wants physicians to have this role, then physicians should be able to control what happens to the information.

If this legislation is passed, I fear that patients will ultimately distrust their doctors. I can't see Mr Jones disclosing that he has abused drugs and that's why he has cellulitis on his arm if he knows that disclosing this to me may lead to hundreds of "legitimate" disclosures to other health information custodians for purposes that are out of my control but, most important and lest we forget, out of the patient's control.

I echo Dr Schumacher's sentiment that this bill allows sweeping intrusion by the government into its citizens' personal lives. We, as physicians, cannot and do not support Bill 159 in the form that it is before us.

Dr Koka: Thank you, Pierre. Mr Chairman, I'm going to make some comments about what my colleagues have already mentioned. I am a practising psychiatrist. We feel that, at least at present, we have a very good privacy act in position already. When my patients come, the first thing they ask is, "Doctor, tell me, where is this information going to go? Who will have access?" Now at least I tell them, "Nobody else without your written consent with the details." The judge is the only one who can summon the records, nobody else, whereas in this act, if it goes through, we don't know who will be accessing this information. I cannot explain to the patient, "Look, the whole world will have the information, but I have no control over it."

In that situation, how can you expect the patient who has been traumatized-and 30%, say, of our female patients with depression have a history of sexual trauma-to tell me? I have had a 60-year-old, for the first time ever in her whole lifetime, disclosing that information to me. With this Bill 159, if it passes through, Mr Chairman, I think this is something that will be sort of censored and we will not be able to treat the patients as they deserve. That's one thing.

With regard to custodians, I think my friend mentioned about the custodians. Of course, we are front-line custodians, but there must be some difference between the custodians as the family physicians or the psychiatrists or individual physicians to hospitals and other institutions or regulatory bodies. So there must be some way of differentiating between the two.

Already now we have a problem with third parties getting information because they get this consent signed under coercion of the patients: "If you don't sign this form, you won't get your benefits." We have a problem with that. If this government can do something to stop that abuse by the insurance companies, I'd greatly appreciate it, because we do report to these people, but on top of that they want every sentence of my clinical notes to give these benefits. They don't need that information. There is very sensitive information not only about the patient, but about the relatives and friends, everybody else. I cannot go on censoring every sentence that I have written. I don't know what is there. So I think if you can do it justice and help, please try and do something about that one.

With those comments, I will end my presentation, and we'll be happy to take some questions.

The Chair: Thank you very much. We'll start the rotation with the Liberals, and I must remind folks that we are on a very specific timeline here, so it's about a minute and a half per caucus.

Mrs Lyn McLeod (Thunder Bay-Atikokan): Thank you very much for excellent presentations raising the concerns of front-line providers. We know that a lot has to be changed, including that directed disclosure by ministers, but may I ask, if the patient had the ability to say, "I want my medical record not released. Put a lockbox on it," would that interfere with your work as front-line practitioners?

Dr McKibbon: If I could respond, the problem with the lockbox notion is that there are times when that kind of information is crucial to protecting others: hospital workers who may be exposed to risks from blood-borne infections; other patients in hospitals who may need to know that a patient is at particular risk for a communicable disease.

I think the correct way to respond to this is to put our faith in the trust relationship and to allow the physician to communicate with the patient and explain to them the reason why any particular bit of information needs to be released. My experience has been that patients, knowing that and knowing specific reasons why things need to be released, are greatly understanding of that. It's when they have no sense of the control, no sense of where it's going and no relationship directing it that they have the greatest difficulty and where we offer them the greatest threat.

Ms Lankin: Good morning, Doctors, and thank you very much for your presentation. Many of the presenters have agreed with you that there is a need for the committee to recommend to the minister that this legislation be tightened dramatically to protect private information.

The key question I have to put to you, however, relates to the ability of health providers to share information among each other. The relationship that you identified between a patient and a doctor, the special nature of that, is also true of the relationship, for example, between a patient and a nurse practitioner or other regulated health professionals. The core of the matter with respect to that sharing of information: if we are truly to have integrated health delivery, if we are to be able to move to primary care reform, there's going to be a need to have some ability to share information and to standardize the form in which that information is recorded. There seems to be some resistance from some parts of the medical community to that. Could you give us your views on that?

Dr Koka: I was going to comment about sharing information between the health care professionals as well as specialists or other physicians. With regard to standardizing the information gathering or charting, it's very difficult, because what I need in psychiatry is different from what my colleague in rheumatology needs or what my colleague in the surgical field needs, or a family physician. If I try to touch a patient, you know, when there's no need, of course I'll be in trouble. So you can't check just everything. The problem each patient comes up with is different. So it's difficult to standardize.

We already have some forms that we've come up with, like neonatal forms and other things. So we do come up with some standardized forms as necessary, but we cannot standardize charts as it is. Maybe if my friends have any comments about it, I'll let Chris or Pierre-

Dr McKibbon: Basically, if I could, the patient is always the ultimate custodian of his record, and if the patient directs freely for that information to be released to any other member of the health care team then it's really quite proper, right and helpful for the patient to release that.

The question is that the patient knows at that point where the information is going. If I ask one of my colleagues to see one of my patients, my patient knows that I've asked them to see them and I've communicated those details that were necessary for their care. It's out of the ambience of that relationship that trustful care happens. The matter with Bill 159 is that that relationship is not there. Within a primary care network, within a co-operative care arrangement between physician and nurse practitioner, that relationship exists and in fact is extended and perhaps deepened. The problem is when it happens outside a relationship of care.

Mr Bob Wood (London West): One of you gentlemen referred to the question of informed consent. I'd like to now invite you to suggest a solution. I'll give you one that you might want to comment on. What about just asking for plain consent as opposed to informed consent?

Dr Koka: It's difficult to say plain consent. It has to be informed. The patients are intelligent. They know what they're doing. They know where the information is going and what it's going for. It has to be informed. When we prescribe some medication or any treatment we prescribe, we have to make sure we have informed consent. We can't just say "blanket consent." I think it's not acceptable.

0920

Mr Wood: One of your colleagues said that he was concerned about the onus placed on the physician if you asked for informed consent rather than plain consent. One solution to that concern would be simply to ask for consent as opposed to informed consent, which has, as you know, a very defined meaning in the medical context.

Dr Bonin: I'm not exactly sure how to respond to that. When a patient consents to a treatment, they understand the risks, they understand the consequences and the benefits of what's about to be done. If they enter any relationship with their physician and they're going to disclose sensitive information, I can't just ask them to consent to giving me this information if they're not going to know where this information is going to go.

I'm not sure I understand the distinction between consent and informed consent, but I can't justifiably ask a patient to tell me something sensitive if I can't tell them what's going to happen to that information, and just ask them to give me a blanket consent that anybody from the Ministry of Health can request this information. He has to know before he discloses this information what the consequences are going to be.

Dr Koka: I work under the Mental Health Act legislation, so I have to get the patient to sign each time. Any information that goes to anybody, he or she has to sign the consent form, a form 14. That's laid out by the law. If any information is going to anybody else without their consent, I'm liable. There's a fixed penalty and punishment for that.

The Chair: Thank you, gentlemen. We appreciate your being part of our high-tech outreach here this morning. Thank you very much for the content of your presentation as well.

Dr Koka: Mr Chairman, thank you very much. Of course, it's a very short period of time. We can't put all our views and impressions on this bill. I'll try and see if I can put together some form of information to you in writing.

The Chair: Thank you very much. The clerk will make sure it's distributed to all the committee members.

Committee members, we'll have a brief delay while they get the next presentation in Sudbury in position.

Good morning. I was expecting to see a Patricia Hatala.

Dr Samuel Berger: That may be me in another life.

The Chair: Who might you be, sir?

Dr Berger: My name is Dr Samuel Berger.

The Chair: Well, Dr Berger, I think they've gone and dialled in our 9:30 instead of our 9:20, so the clerk is just trying to resolve this little glitch in our travels down the electronic highway. Bear with us, please, just for a second.

Dr Berger: All right.

Mr Bert Johnson (Perth-Middlesex): Where is he?

The Chair: Dr Berger is in Little Current.

Mr Johnson: Patricia, where is she?

The Chair: She's still in Sudbury. I'm surprised they didn't just change chairs.

PATRICIA HATALA

The Chair: Good morning. I take it we're joined by Ms Hatala.

Ms Patricia Hatala: That's correct. Good morning.

The Chair: We have 10 minutes for you here today. Thank you for joining us in our deliberations.

Ms Hatala: Ladies and gentlemen of the panel and all concerned in the opinion-gathering re Bill 159, the Personal Health Information Privacy Act, thank you for giving me this opportunity to make this presentation.

As in any issue or complaint, it is much better to accompany such with suggestions as to how a situation may be approached or possibly resolved. I am making this presentation with this in mind. I do not intend any of the comments herein to be taken as accusations or personal or general affronts.

Am I not correct in believing that, as a condition for employment in the health care field, all workers are sworn to keeping information contained in all health care matters strictly confidential? If this requirement is not in place, it should be in place. If this requirement is in place and is not being monitored and/or respected by those involved in care, including volunteers, appropriate action should be taken. If confidentiality matters are in place and being respected, it would seem that privacy of personal health information would almost be a non-issue.

Having myself worked in the health care field for some 30-odd years, I can say I did so knowing and believing that any transgression of confidentiality on my part could result in the termination of my employment. I wholeheartedly agreed with this provision then, and I still do.

This being said, my own wish in this matter is that all my health care records, whether these records contain sensitive material or not, be available to whomever happens to be my health care provider at any given time, to enable optimum, most efficient care or, to put it another way, to enhance the ability of the caregiver to provide the most appropriate care at any given time under varying prevailing circumstances. This would, of necessity, include all health care providers, not just medical care providers; for example, naturopaths, chiropractors, acupuncturists, not just MDs and nurses.

Health care staff should be discouraged from discussing cases in hallways and cafeteria settings where these areas are shared by the public.

If a possible transgression of confidentiality seems to have taken place, we must keep in mind that just because a person's health history becomes public, this does not necessarily mean it was medical personnel who made it so. Individuals share their health status information with friends and arbitrary acquaintances on what seems to be a continuing basis.

In my view, the more relevant information that is available to those carrying out testing analysis and/or hands-on care, the greater the degree of detailed, accurate and comprehensive diagnosis that can be made and the greater degree of appropriate care that can be given resulting in greater benefit to the patient/client.

If health care records-regular type as well as sensitive type-are available to health care workers at any given time, then results of recent tests are therein contained. This may well contribute to cost-cutting, as unnecessary repeat testing could be avoided.

Although in health care it is advisable to deal with all patients/clients with utmost care and precaution, if so-called sensitive contents such as a diagnosis of AIDS are not made available to staff, cohabiting partners and health care people who are dealing with the person, either person to person or in analyzing material for diagnosis, these people are unnecessarily put at risk and may not be appropriately cautioned. This situation may result in a person not taking extra precautions in order to ensure self-protection.

Health care records belong to the patient, as I understand, and should be readily available to same. At the present time, if I wish to choose a different physician, for instance, my records would only be transferred to the new physician, and then only those records which the present physician deemed relevant. I happen to consider all of my medical health care records relevant.

0930

At present, if one physician leaves town, it is sometimes nearly impossible to access one's records. Computerizing all records and making them available to those who require them at any given time would be a large undertaking. However, in this day and age of computerization and communications refinements, I have no doubt that such could and can be accomplished and could and would be to the benefit of all concerned. Such a move may very well be most cost-efficient in the long run.

Perhaps a system-and this is going to bring up exceptions in your mind, I'm sure-which would allow a patient-client to choose whether the patient-client wishes to have all records available or wishes to keep records or parts of records private could be set up. If this is pursued, identification, for example, by thumbprint might be a good way to ensure that an individual's records are not confused with that of anyone else. This mode of ID, of course, would be a voluntary one.

In conclusion, I would like to say that as for my health care records, I would like them to be specifically identified to me-example, thumbprint-made available to me and made available to whichever health care assistant is serving me at any given time. Thank you for your time and attention.

The Chair: Thank you very much, Ms Hatala. If you're so inclined, we've got a couple of minutes. I'll give the time to the next party in rotation, which is the NDP.

Ms Lankin: Thank you very much, Ms Hatala. We appreciate your presentation and joining us here today.

I think that the last statement you made really sums up the opinion of a lot of citizens we've heard from by letters and some who've appeared before committee that our health records are our own. We want to have full access to them as individuals and we want to ensure that those health professionals we're dealing with, who we have a trusting relationship with, have access to all of the information that we want them to have.

A minute ago you also made reference to the possibility that an individual patient may not want all of their health records released at some given point. That's been referred to as a lockbox provision. The symbolism of that is that you'd be able to take some information and put it in a file cabinet drawer and lock it away and it wouldn't be passed on from health care provider to health care provider unless you changed your mind and gave approval to that.

Some of the health care professionals we've heard from, doctors in particular, have said no, they believe that the doctor or the health care professional is in the best position to judge whether or not information can or should be shared, and that it would be dangerous to leave that to the patient to decide. I think it's obvious, if you have a good, trusting relationship and you've talked that through, you're going to come to some consensus between the health care provider and the patient. But if it comes down to it, in the end, do you believe that that information belongs to the individual and that you should be able to make a decision that some aspects of it perhaps are not shared, or do you think that once it's in that health record, any health professional you choose to share the whole record with should have access to all aspects of the information?

Ms Hatala: I think that health care workers know what they're doing. They're credible people. They know what confidentiality really means. I can't help but think how making all the information available to them could be a detriment to me. Right now I'm being treated, trying to heal my lungs from my asthma symptoms. A situation like this is occurring now. For instance, something that happened earlier in my life and has medical records attached to it that aren't available at this time might not clue somebody in as to how my body reacts to different things, because each individual, of course, is an individual, and our chemistry's all different. So I think, yes, they should have the access.

I think as far as privacy goes, patients are already choosing to keep diagnoses under wraps. As I said, I did work in the medical field. When the AIDS situation did come up, sometimes some of the requisitions we would get wouldn't tell us as health care workers that this person had this particular disease. We, of course, are supposed to deal with everything with the utmost care, but we could be exposed. I don't think that's really correct for somebody who already knows the confidentiality system is in place and it's expected of you.

The Chair: Thank you, Ms Hatala, for appearing before us here today. We appreciate it very much and thank you for a thoughtful presentation.

Ms Hatala: Thank you very much. Have a good day, everybody.

INTERCILIUM

The Chair: Dr Berger, we're back with you again in what I suspect is a first: legislative hearings in Little Current. Good morning and welcome to our proceedings. The floor is yours for the next 20 minutes.

Dr Samuel Berger: Thank you very much. I actually intended to leave some of the time for questioning, so I don't know that I'll speak the full 20 minutes. I just would like to say in introduction that I'm extremely impressed with the equipment at the Manitoulin Health Centre in Little Current. This will change the face of rural medicine. This is a pilot project here among several associations, but I was quite taken aback to find that I could speak with you from the island.

I'd like to ask, first of all, whether the comments that I submitted have been received by the committee.

The Chair: Yes, they have; thank you.

Dr Berger: Good. I'm just going to give a word of background initially. I've worked in the area of medical informatics for the last seven years and I'm currently chairman of an Internet privacy company, which is Intercilium Inc. We are developing a product which has to do with health privacy, so my interest in this area goes back for the seven years that I've worked in the field.

I'm particularly concerned about what I believe are the deficiencies of the act to address head-on the whole issue of the Internet age. I'm going to elaborate somewhat on the comments that I made in the preface. Although I've submitted several comments, there are really four main issues that I want to cover. Number one is, again, the issue of the Internet age. The second issue is legal access to personal health information.

The Chair: Doctor, could I ask you to either pan the camera to your right or move slightly to your left?

Dr Berger: OK, how's that?

The Chair: That's much better; thank you. Oh, now you've gone a bit too far.

Dr Berger: OK, one second.

The Chair: There, stop.

Dr Berger: I can hold this position.

Thirdly, I think that the act is perhaps the weakest in the areas of consent. Finally, although I didn't elaborate on this in the preface but I do refer to it in terms of 7 (a), I think that the whole issue of genetic testing and the privacy issues surrounding it must be addressed by the committee.

0940

First of all, in terms of the Internet, we have a situation here where there are commercial companies and other Web sites which are very involved in the collation and collection of personal health information. I believe if this is not specifically spelled out, if these sites are not spelled out as health care custodians, they can fall between the cracks of the entire act. Several commercial companies, for instance, are offering personal health records, personal health diaries, on the Internet, or they are involved in diet management, sports management, many different areas where they are actually asking all sorts of questions. You could go to an aerobics site that might ask questions such as, "Do you have any heart disease," or, "Do you have high cholesterol?" You've got an absolute plethora of sites out there that have tremendously sensitive information about individuals and they are able to use and distribute this information without any particular act of legislation curtailing it.

I feel it's very important to stress that the act should define-in my view, a health care custodian should be anybody who has personal health care information, whether it be a school or an employer. My particular interest is that, in the Internet age, the committee specifically delineate that Web sites which hold personal health information must protect this information. That's the first point I strongly wish to stress.

Of interest, I will mention as an aside-and I didn't address this in the brief but it's something the committee may wish to consider-there is a very big issue of physician privacy which is coming to the fore, because many of these commercial sites actually ask people, "What is the name of your family doctor?" or, "What is the health care institution that you attend?" In fact, these sites can compile databases on physicians and health care workers without the health care worker or the physician knowing that these questions are being asked about them. I think, at best, it's an invasion of privacy; at worst, it's extremely dangerous because, as you know, physicians who perform abortions, for instance, have been shot in this country. So you don't really want that information being pulled out by people on sites.

I think the committee has to look a little bit at the two sides of the coin: both the protection of personally identifiable health information of the subject whom it concerns but also to keep in mind the health care providers and their issues of privacy. But that is an aside.

Secondly-and I really debated whether to bring this issue to your attention, because I think it's the central issue that is talked about in the United States and Canada, as well as in many other jurisdictions, that being that law enforcement can summons a medical record. I must tell you, the most uncomfortable question I'm probably ever asked as a physician is when a patient says to me, "Is this information confidential?" I have to answer them, "With the exception of if your medical record is summonsed." I believe that destroys the patient-physician interaction and gives law enforcement and the judicial system a privilege that supersedes and is greater than our own privilege. I think physician-patient privilege should be at the level of solicitor-client privilege, which is recognized as the highest privilege in terms of these matters.

The concerns are becoming more acute. I refer you to an article just published by the Wall Street Journal the other day. Where court records become public, there is a new strategy out there of both individuals and organizations publishing public court documents. These court documents, based on summonses, often contain information of a medical and psychiatric nature. Again, when you enter these themes into the world of the Internet and the very strong search mechanisms on the Internet, these issues easily become very apparent. There is not the so-called practical obscurity.

In fact, there is already anecdotal evidence. One woman was searching the genealogy of her family with her daughter, and a divorce court proceeding came up in the search which referred to an affair she had had. Now, this isn't a medical matter but it came up in front of the screen-easily obtained. So anything medical and psychiatric that is contained in any public court record is going to be fair game for the world of the Internet and I think opens up tremendous privacy issues. So I would urge the committee to consider that side of things.

The other side is that nothing is sacrosanct. When you need information from people and they realize law enforcement can have access to it, it tremendously influences the medical care you can provide and the whole realm of privacy that you want to guarantee to patients. There are very good studies done by the California HealthCare Foundation in the United States which showed that one out of six Americans have done something actively to protect the confidentiality of their medical information. Usually that active thing is either withholding information or lying to health care providers. I don't believe the situation is any different in Canada. It's important to know what drugs people are using, what sexually transmitted diseases they may be susceptible to and so forth, but if people have the fear of this information being able to come up in a court document or otherwise, they will be withholding the information, which skews medical research and skews good medical care.

There was a section that I referred to in my comments about labour relations, and I'm particularly shocked by that because employers are very interested in getting information about individuals. I worked in a lot of rural communities where the employers are very actively involved through the Workers' Compensation Board-it's under a new name now-and other areas, and it does influence hireability and employability and job promotion and so forth, so I'm a little bit perplexed at the entire section where labour relations are left out of the picture by the act.

I'm going to move to the area of consent, and I can very briefly summarize this. The feeling of ourselves as a company and I think of most privacy advocates is that the principle that information given with consent for one reason should never be used for another reason without further consent should be adhered to. While I commend the committee for addressing this in terms of a research and ethics committee, that researchers, if they want to use information given for one reason or another, should have to clear an ethics review board, I think, more importantly, they should have to clear the person who first gave the information.

The concern is, if there is cover-all consent-and that's why I suggested that it's very important to put a time limit on any consent given, because sometimes you have people who say, "Yes, my medical record can be used for research," and two years later they have a positive HIV diagnosis and they don't want their records used for research any more because they don't feel comfortable with who may be getting their records, yet they signed a blanket consent without time restraint. So I would urge the committee to place into the legislation that consent must be on a per-use-with-time-limit basis in all instances and the consent must be obtained from the person from whom the information is obtained.

It's important for you to know that Minnesota has legislation that adheres to that principle. The Mayo Clinic in Minnesota actually cried a lot about that information because they do a lot of retroactive research on very good files from decades ago. They felt, "Now we have to go and ask somebody from 30 years ago or ask their heirs if we can do a new research project," but in fact the Minnesota legislation said, "Yes, you have to do that." They are finding out that most of the time it's going without problem and greater than 97% of the patients who come to the Mayo Clinic are giving widespread consent to their information being used for research. But the issue is, you have to get the consent from the individual involved.

Finally, I want to say something about genetic testing. You have a clause 7(a) which talks about individuals being dead for more than 30 years, that it's open game to find out anything. This is extremely troublesome, particularly in the world of genetic testing. I'll give you some examples.

0950

You could have somebody who at age 44 dies of Huntington's chorea. At that time, they've got a four-year-old or an eight-year-old child. Thirty years later, that child's going to be 34 years old. Maybe that child is in a position to become a CEO of a Fortune 500 company. Incidentally, about 60% of Fortune 500 companies look into the health backgrounds of prospective employees before prospective job advances. That record will be open game. If they want to solicit any record from the father of a patient, they'll be able to.

In fact, this is a very hot topic that was just addressed the other day, because in the United States there is a company that has been doing genetic testing for carpal tunnel syndrome. It's a syndrome that affects the activity of the wrist. They were doing it largely unbeknownst to employees. But what I wanted to point out is that the Genetic Alliance, which is a coalition of patient advocacy groups, did a study just of 220 respondents, but 16% of them cited bias at work and in the military based on documented cases of genetic discrimination. The survey included such cases as a woman who alleged she was denied long-term disability insurance because the company said she had a predisposition for Alzheimer's disease. Its decision was based on a doctor's scribbled notation in her medical record that her father might have the condition. Again, one has to understand that when you have 50-year-olds dying of diseases, and 30 years later their information can be studied, their own children are only going to be 50 at that time and can face tremendous discrimination for themselves and their children and so forth.

I think the act has not been cognizant enough of the entire Human Genome Project and the implications. I think a good starting place would be to say no, somebody being dead for 30 years isn't enough. I think we should increase it to at least 150 years. You use the figure of 150 years at another point in the act, to say that in terms of recorded information, it doesn't apply to information longer than 150 years.

Those are the main points that I'd like to address. I'd be happy to take any questions.

The Chair: Actually, Doctor, you've timed it very well. We have almost seconds left. Knowing myself and my colleagues, we can hardly get our names out in that amount of time, never mind pose a question and have a reasonable answer. But I do appreciate your very detailed and thoughtful presentation before us here today. If you have any supplementary thoughts, please feel free to send them to the committee. I'm sure if the committee members have any questions, we've got your particulars on file and hopefully you'd be able to respond to their questions at that time. Thank you again for joining us today.

MAVIS LIPMAN

The Chair: Our next conference presentation is from Ottawa this morning. Good morning. Ms Lipman, I assume?

Ms Mavis Lipman: Yes, it is Mavis Lipman.

The Chair: Good morning and welcome to the committee. We look forward to hearing your presentation. The floor is yours for the next 10 minutes.

Ms Lipman: I thank you very much for the opportunity to submit my brief today. I actually did prepare 20 copies of my brief with supporting research and professional statements. I'm not sure where I should send them, but perhaps you could tell me after.

The Chair: We will do that; thank you.

Ms Lipman: Although I am from Quebec, and my profession is a medical laboratory science technologist, I have something in common with many individuals and families in Ontario. Some of our wonderful children went into therapy in the last decade with no memories of childhood sexual abuse. They were exposed to recovered memory therapy, which elicited in many of our children the most horrendous and horrific accusations of childhood sexual abuse, mostly against their parents, and mostly against their fathers.

We have had a great deal of difficulty having access to therapy records. In the past, I possibly could have respected the need for complete confidentiality and privacy in protecting medical and mental health records. However, when unsafe and unproven mental health practices are being used by mental health caretakers or practitioners, I think we have to question how protected those therapy records can be. Those therapy records contain the information that shows how those memories emerged in the therapeutic setting and how suggestive those practices were.

The professional associations today, since 1993, such as the American Psychological Association, the American Psychiatric Association, the Australian psychological association, the Canadian Psychiatric Association and the Royal College of Psychiatrists in Britain, have now condemned these practices. Especially the last one, the Royal College of Psychiatrists from Britain, has condemned all of those suggestive practices that therapists were using in their therapeutic setting to elicit these memories, like journalling, guided imagery, age regression, hypnosis and sodium amytol interviews. Some of our children were exposed to this.

The two cases that I present in my brief went into the criminal court system. One is my husband, AG. A daughter from his first marriage, whom I knew very well for 16 years, who visited our home with her friends, with her boyfriends, and lived with a daughter of mine also for close to a year in Ontario, was his loving, loyal daughter. After going into therapy for pain management of a back injury, and maybe some other issues in her life that I am unaware of, she emerged with the most heinous, horrendous, terrible accusations about her father.

Since my husband for close to 20 years had an extremely severe case of myasthenia gravis, this had a major effect on his health. He had a major exacerbation requiring major invasive procedures, was hospitalized for seven weeks, had numerous syncopes, fell down stairs, broke ribs, broke teeth, and was unable to defend himself. I was in and out of the courts for four years. He lost his entire family. He lost his entire life's savings and a legacy that can't even be passed on to his grandchildren. The daughter was in therapy in Toronto.

The other case is a friend of mine whose daughter also received therapy in Ontario. His case was presented before the courts in 1992, when judges were not familiar with the now-discredited and inadmissible, in many courts, cases related to recovered memory therapy cases. He was incarcerated for six years. Because he was taken to the Millhaven Assessment Unit in a protective cage situation, considered a dangerous sex offender, he was assaulted several times just when he was being assessed, and that continued throughout his incarceration. He lost his children, his job, all his assets and even his good health in the process, and he's not 60 years of age yet. It is a major concern for myself and other people so affected that we have to know what went on in those therapy sessions and what kind of practices were utilized by the therapist. We don't want this to happen to other people.

1000

As a medical laboratory science technologist, every method in my laboratory is scrutinized and given accreditation by qualified boards in my field. Every test system I have must have three quality controls: a normal level and two abnormal levels. We can't practise without disclosing that type of information. Patients would die if our test systems were not working. Physicians would not be able to diagnose and treat patients effectively.

In my rationale I have stated that just as medicines are tested for safety and effectiveness before they are used on patients, therapies should be tested for safety and effectiveness before they are used on clients. Informed consent to mental health care treatment is based on a full, fair and truthful disclosure of known and foreseeable risks and hazards of the proposed treatment and of alternate treatments. This process allows the patient, client or legal guardian of the patient to exercise free and independent judgment by reasonably balancing the probable risks against the probable benefits.

A standard of care in mental health treatment reforms the mental health industry as a whole by establishing a firewall of testing for safety and effectiveness and to stop fads like lobotomies in the 1960s, recovered memory therapy, multiple personality disorder and satanic ritual abuse, which swept the profession in the last decade and a half. This would provide an incentive for the mental health profession to keep themselves and their clients informed about therapies that do and don't work.

I also think a client should have access to the therapist's credentials, the experience of the therapist, the type of therapy the client may or may not want to engage in and also the right to cease that therapy if it seems harmful and ineffective.

In looking at Bill 159, part I, "health care practitioner" means (d). I was unsure if this could include unlicensed people, self-styled people who touted that they were health care practitioners who were untrained, who received payment without any accountability for who they were and for somebody monitoring what type of practices they were using on their clients. So I have included "must be a certified member of an accredited organization where a recognized standard of care is maintained."

In part VI, disclosures in proceedings, which I'm particularly sensitive to at the moment, I thought that an addendum-perhaps I haven't written it in the best words, but if it was of interest to adopt something-could include that mental health records and therapy records should be produced, if subpoenaed (i) when malpractice is strongly suspected, (ii) when a witness's testimony is unreliable due to mental illness, (iii) when a witness's testimony is unreliable as a result of suggestive or unproven mental health practices, and (iv) when a witness's accusations remain uncorroborated.

A major problem with many cases of repressed or recovered memory therapy that went through the courts was that those men were either charged or convicted based solely on the uncorroborated testimony of the complainant, who had never had memories of abuse and had gone into memory retrieval therapy.

In part VIII, I was concerned because I have been a parent of children who have had epilepsy and other problems in their lives. I had to be the dominant caring parent until they were of age, and of course they still needed a great deal of care, monitoring and assistance with physical problems. I was concerned, if I understood it correctly, because I feel that a parent should be able to access a record of counselling, if the child is under 16 years of age, if the health service appears harmful and ineffective to the child. Maybe I didn't understand it correctly, but I don't think that information can be withheld from a valid, supporting, caring parent.

I don't know if I have time, but I have just sort of highlighted some other recommendations. I feel it is vitally important that we-

The Chair: Ms Lipman, I should have mentioned, but I didn't want to interrupt you, that the clerk has in fact distributed a copy of your presentation to us, which I guess you sent in by fax. We have gone a fair bit over time already, but I wanted you to get through all your recommendations on Bill 159. Perhaps I could just ask if you've got any brief closing comments?

Ms Lipman: My brief closing comments are, I think we really need to inform the public through the Ministry of Health, professional organizations or other key areas that we have to watch out for therapy that is damaging patients. I believe licensed therapists who are mismanaging the treatment of their patients must be held accountable and brought before their boards. Unlicensed therapists should not be able to treat and diagnose patients, and if they mismanage their clients, they should be brought before the courts. That's my message.

The Chair: Thank you very much. On behalf of the committee members, we very much appreciate the fact you drove all the way to Ottawa this morning and that you took the time to prepare and make this presentation before us today.

Ms Lipman: Thank you very much for your time.

The Chair: Ms Lankin, before we go on to the first group, you apparently-

Ms Lankin: Yes, a request to legislative research. Yesterday, research officer Susan Swift circulated a memo to us that included a copy of the model state health privacy legislation that has been drawn up by two Georgetown professors. Also, in a number of presentations we've heard reference to the Minnesota legislation, and we heard that again this morning. I was wondering if it would be possible to ask legislative research-perhaps our research officer here could get some assistance with this, because I know he'll be busy doing the summation-to take a look at the model state legislation and the Minnesota legislation and give us a summary of the philosophical underpinnings of those pieces of legislation and, if possible, the difference in approach between those and Bill 159. If it is possible for that to be done and appended to the summary of the proceedings the committee expects to receive next Wednesday, that would be very helpful.

1010

SURVIVORS OF MEDICAL ABUSE

The Chair: Our first group here in Toronto this morning is Survivors of Medical Abuse. I call them forward to the witness table, please. Good morning and welcome to the committee.

Ms Josie MacPherson: My name is Josie MacPherson, and I'm going to be representing my group here today. I'm a facilitator of SOMA, Survivors of Medical Abuse, a self-help group respecting patients' rights.

I have read the bill and have several concerns. The first is that the number of organizations and persons designated as health information custodians is too lengthy. It includes a health care practitioner, a drugless practitioner, a long-term-care service provider, a child and family services service provider, a person who operates a hospital, an independent health facility, an approved charitable home for the aged, a home for special care, a home for retarded persons, a retirement home for the elderly, a pharmacy, a laboratory or a specimen-collection centre, an ambulance service, a community health program or service, a program or service funded under the Developmental Services Act and a program of employment supports.

It also includes an evaluator within the meaning of the Health Care Consent Act, an assessor within the meaning of the Substitute Decisions Act, a medical officer of health, the minister, a district health council, a college within the meaning of the Regulated Health Professions Act-and I will refer to this again later-Cancer Care Ontario, a person who maintains a registry of personal health information that relates to a specific disease or condition or that relates to the storage or donation of body parts, a person or class of persons who maintains a repository of personal health information for the primary purpose of data analysis or research. A health information custodian does not, however, include an aboriginal healer, midwife or spiritual healer.

The bill provides protection from liability to health information custodians and persons employed by or in the service of custodians if they act in good faith and reasonably in circumstances.

This list is too exhaustive. It leaves a lot of room for error and abuse and leads me to believe it will be extremely difficult to police and safeguard. According to Ontario's privacy commissioner, "Under this bill, individuals have little control over the collection, use and disclosure of their personal health information."

I made a submission to the federal Office of Health and the Information Highway information, analysis and connectivity branch on November 13, 1998. They have put together a report providing strategic advice and recommendations to the Minister of Health regarding the development of a strategy toward a Canadian Health Infostructure. Has this report been used in drafting Bill 159?

My second concern is that this bill will be difficult to police and safeguard. Patients' rights will be violated. Under the proposed bill, a patient may appeal to the privacy commissioner if they feel their health care information has been misused. However, the bill provides liability protection to health information custodians as long as they can say they were acting in good faith. This provides a large margin of error for health information custodians. What guarantee do patients have that there will be greater accountability in this system than there is in the health care colleges, specifically the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario? Fewer than 4% of complaints made to the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario ever make it to a successful closure for the patient at the discipline stage of the process.

In 1997, HPRAC, the Health Professions Regulatory Advisory Council, retained a consultant to review the complaints and discipline process at the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario. Currently, another review is underway by an independent consulting firm, KPMG Consulting, commissioned by the Ministry of Health, to conduct a review of the complaints and discipline process at the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario. Under Bill 159, professional colleges are designated as health information custodians. Why should patients trust them with this privilege? Clearly, it provides them with more information to invalidate patients' needs and concerns.

There are numerous accounts of the lack of accountability at the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario. More recently, Dr Deep, a Toronto cardiologist who allegedly defrauded OHIP in the amount of $1 million and has been under their scrutiny for 30 years, is still practising and has not been convicted of any charges. In fact, the OHIP fraud unit, a secret inner body within the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario, has failed to bring successful closure to this case. Refer to "Secrecy Laws Hamper Probe of MD," the Toronto Star, February 13, 2001.

The Chair: Ms MacPherson, I probably should put this on the record here again for your benefit. When individuals get into mentioning specific names, it's appropriate to caution witnesses that while MPPs enjoy parliamentary privilege pursuant to the Legislative Assembly Act, it's unclear whether or not these privileges and protections extend to witnesses who appear before our committees. For example, it may very well be that testimony you've given or are about to give could be used against you in a legal proceeding or elsewhere. We just caution you to-

Ms MacPherson: OK. I wasn't aware of that, but I'm simply referring to newspaper articles.

The Chair: Let me just say that it's no different than what would happen if you had a conversation out on the street. I just don't want people to have the perception they're covered as MPPs are covered.

Ms MacPherson: Thank you for sharing that. I do want to continue because I am referring to newspaper articles and I'm backing up everything I say with newspaper articles.

The confidentiality rules of the CPSO disabled the college from serving its mandate to protect the public, and I do have a newspaper article that attests to that.

A patient who went to see Dr Deep for heart-related problems and later learned her medical files contained misinformation about psychotherapy, for which he billed OHIP, now has an inaccurate, false medical record. Under Bill l59, this inaccurate file will be given to virtually everyone, except for an aboriginal or spiritual healer, and will follow her everywhere. She can attach a letter to her file saying she disagrees with the psychotherapy segment, but chances are future physicians will regard her as a difficult patient and ignore her plea for accuracy of her record. Will it affect her health care? In a word, yes.

My third concern is that when a patient's medical file is inaccurate with her history or symptoms not taken down as they are stated, then the patient's best health interests are not served. I will use the example of a Beeton mother of two young children, one a newborn, who died at the Southlake Regional Health Centre on January 7, 1998, due to human error, and I've attached the newspaper article for this one. I want to make a correction. It's the Era-Banner, February 27, 2001.

There is an inquiry taking place at this time into the death of this woman who was found dead in her hospital bed. She told her common-law husband days before her death she did not feel her medical complaints were being taken seriously by the hospital personnel, and this again is backed up in newspaper articles. "Although Desrochers had been having between three and 25 bloody bowel movements in the weeks" preceding her death, doctors failed to diagnose her with extreme inflammatory colitis. The day before her death, she had 22 bloody bowel movements. The day of her death she had 17 bloody bowel movements. The purpose of the inquiry is not to assign blame, but to ensure that a similar situation does not happen again. However, the patient's loss is total and irreversible. I ask, why would a patient, such as Ms Desrochers, who was experiencing such severe symptoms in an Ontario hospital, not be taken seriously? Were her medical charts and files accurate? Again, I'm posing questions.

In summary, I would like to say I do not believe Bill 159 will serve patients. It may very well serve medical research corporations, giving them greater access to patients' health information, but at what cost to the patients? What about the Hippocratic oath? Whatever happened to doctor-patient confidentiality? It cannot possibly be honoured under this proposed bill.

Finally, I agree with the federal Privacy Commissioner, who stated the bill should be scrapped. Thank you for your time.

The Chair: Thank you very much. That affords us about three minutes per caucus for questioning.

Mr Wood: Maybe I can come back to your last statement. I got the impression you don't like this bill very well. What the federal commissioner suggested in effect was a bill based on their act, Bill C-6. I don't know whether you've had a chance to look at the federal act. Do you like the federal act? Are there things you don't like about the federal act?

Ms MacPherson: I haven't had a chance to read that bill separately, so I can't really comment.

1020

Mr Wood: At the moment, professional disciplinary bodies have quite wide access to patient records for the purpose of the work they do. The issue has arisen before the committee: should that continue, should there be restrictions on that? I wondered if you might share with us whether or not you think there should be some restriction on the access of disciplinary bodies to medical records? In other words, right now they can access, without your consent, your records for the purposes of disciplining a physician. Should that continue? Should we put restrictions on that? What's your view of that?

Ms MacPherson: I certainly don't feel these should be health information custodians and, carte blanche, be able to go in there and have access to all of our medical records. Do I feel there should be restrictions? I think there should be restrictions and, unless it affects the case in question, a person's health records from their entire history should not be presented publicly. Yes, I do.

Mr Wood: Let me ask you about another issue we've heard about, and that's the question of research. We've heard some people say that for certain kinds of research, because of the small sample size, you can't do the research unless you can access information without the patient's consent. Consent isn't practical for reasons I won't bore you with. That's what we've heard. Now if we come to the conclusion that's right, there are a certain number of research projects that can't be done unless we allow access without consent. There are two things we can do. One is to say, "OK, we'll allow access in those limited circumstances with oversight," or we can say, "No, you just aren't going to be able to do that kind of research in Ontario." I wondered which side of that issue you might come down on.

Ms MacPherson: I cannot agree with taking a patient's files without consent. I still feel that medical information belongs to the patient. It is their private, confidential information, and if you can't access it with their permission, you should not access it at all.

Mr Wood: If we reached the point where we say what you just said, we have to say there are certain kinds of medical research you cannot do in Ontario. You'd be prepared to say that?

Ms MacPherson: I'm not familiar with those types of-

Mr Wood: By the way, I'm not saying we've come to that conclusion. I'm just inviting you to comment. If we reach that point.

Ms MacPherson: Does that situation even exist?

Mr Wood: I'm putting you on the spot here.

Ms MacPherson: I know.

Mr Wood: What would you do? If we reach that point, would you be prepared to say no research of that nature in Ontario or would you be prepared to allow access?

Ms MacPherson: First of all, I just want to qualify that and say I'm not aware of a type of research going on in the health field where the sample size is so small that you have to resort to going into patients' health records without their permission. Then my other point is, if it's a valid piece of research, chances are the patients would give consent because they want to get better and they want to find solutions to the problem as well. I feel there could be something underhanded about it because we're talking about having to take these files without the patient's consent. That's where I stand.

Mr Wood: Thank you. Those are my questions.

Mrs McLeod: I too want to start with the issues you've raised about the long list of people who are identified as health information custodians.

Ms MacPherson: That's my main concern.

Mrs McLeod: I think your concern is probably that these people, by virtue of being defined as health information custodians, also have a privileged access to patient records, and there's a long list. Certainly the federal Privacy Commissioner raised the same concern, I think particularly around the district health councils and members of district health councils.

But I want to flip it around for a moment, if I may, and ask, first of all, do you think we need some legislation that puts rules on people who are going to hold health information because of the nature of the work they're doing, whether it's a physician or a long-term-care institution? We all believe the legislation needs to be tightened up, but if the focus of it is on putting rules around these people who get access to health information because people go to them or they're staying with them, would you think the list is too long then?

Ms MacPherson: I like the idea of putting rules and restricting access to people's health files and not, carte blanche, allowing anyone to have them. I think putting a set of rules there with restrictions is important. The other point which I think is very important is the inaccuracy that can be found in health records. I use the example of the patient who complained in the Dr Deep case. Basically she didn't go for psychotherapy. She went for a heart-related ailment, but according to her file she was a psychiatric patient. I'm sure she'd like to have that cleansed from her records, and it's not easy to do. We've come across in our group many cases where patients have found inaccuracies in their medical records. You can't really change that; you're stuck with that, whether it's a label or whatever.

Mrs McLeod: That's certainly an issue the committee has heard before and, in fact, a concern that Bill 159 makes it even more difficult to correct a medical record.

Ms MacPherson: I'm concerned about that.

Mrs McLeod: One of the suggestions that was made to us was, while questioning the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario, that when they have convicted somebody of fraud, there is an obligation to go back and inform the patients who may have been affected by that individual's malpractice and that those records would then be automatically corrected.

Ms MacPherson: Is that in place right now?

Mrs McLeod: No, that's a suggestion that's come before the committee. In fact, what's in the legislation right now would say that you don't have the right to appeal to the privacy commissioner if the health practitioner has attached a statement of disagreement to the correction of the record, which takes away even the ability to appeal to the privacy commissioner. That's definitely a concern we've had.

Ms MacPherson: And I hope you will address it.

Mrs McLeod: I hope so too.

Ms Lankin: Thank you very much for your presentation. My colleagues have covered the questions I had, so I have no further questions.

Ms MacPherson: Thank you very much for your time.

The Chair: Thank you for coming before us here today.

ONTARIO ASSOCIATION OF OPTOMETRISTS

The Chair: Our next presentation will be from the Ontario Association of Optometrists. Good morning and welcome to the committee.

Dr Christopher Nicol: Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, honourable committee members and Mr Chair. I have a bit of a cold, so I hope you can bear with me and I can come through loud and clear.

My name is Christopher Nicol. I'm an optometrist in private practice. I also act as a policy consultant to the Ontario Association of Optometrists. I'm presenting comments to the committee on behalf of the Ontario Association of Optometrists today.

The Ontario Association of Optometrists-and I'll use the short title "association"-represents approximately 80% of the optometrists in Ontario. Optometrists are primary eye care providers regulated under the Optometry Act and the Regulated Health Professions Act, 1991. Optometrists assess, diagnose and treat vision disorders and prescribed diseases of the eye. We are presently requesting an extension to our scope of practice to include the controlled act of prescribing some therapeutic pharmaceutical agents.

For the purposes of Bill 159, optometrists would be considered as health care practitioners and health information custodians. I'd like to thank the committee for this opportunity to present the views of the association on Bill 159 to the committee.

The process of review has been open and all stakeholders have been provided ample opportunity to comment on the legislation. My brief comments today will present an overview of our impressions of the proposed act.

The association's interests in Bill 159 relate to the following three objects: (1) the interests of our members as practising optometrists; (2) the principles of privacy legislation in general; and (3) the public's expectation of confidentiality in matters of health care.

Most people would consider health information as the most private of all personal information. In our analysis of the bill, the association used as criteria the basic principles and guidelines for general privacy legislation established by the Canadian Standards Association in 1996. We understand the federal government, as the basis for federal privacy legislation, has adopted these guidelines. You may be aware of them, but I'll just read them again.

The eight guidelines are the following: (1) accountability for abuses or breaches of confidentiality; (2) demonstration of a purpose for the information; (3) consent for collection and disclosure of information; (4) limit the collection, use and disclosure to a demonstrated purpose; (5) maintain accuracy of information; (6) safeguard information; (7) ensure openness of collection practices; and (8) provide individual access to information.

Generally, the association has determined that the proposed bill is consistent with the basic tenets of the federal guidelines on use, collection and disclosure of personal information.

Additionally, the association notes that the changes to the previous draft legislation have addressed some of the concerns expressed in our initial and subsequent responses to the early drafts. These concerns were mostly that the requirements for the collection, use and disclosure of health information should not interfere with the normal and usual process for the transfer of health information within the health care system and between health care practitioners.

Furthermore, the association wanted to ensure that any requirements under new legislation, additional to patient confidentiality requirements under regulations in the Optometry Act, would not create obstacles for the efficient delivery of patient care. Presently, optometrists are required to maintain the confidentiality of patient health information through professional misconduct regulations under the Optometry Act. The regulations not only restrict the release of patient information to anyone without the consent of the patient, but they also require patient access to the information upon request.

1030

The three broad optometry regulations effectively ensure the privacy and disclosure of personal health information in the control of the optometrist or other health care practitioners. The association is unaware of any evidence that the Regulated Health Professions Act, 1991, has been ineffective in maintaining confidentiality of patient information.

Bill 159, among other purposes, creates specific circumstances in part VI where health information custodians may disclose personal information without the patient's consent. This provision in the bill therefore expands the criteria for disclosure from the present exemption for optometrists, that is, as required by law, to several categories of disclosure requirements. Consequently, the public will have somewhat less assurance of privacy than under existing legislation.

Even though much of the bill is acceptable to the association, we have identified four specific sections of the bill that merit further comment. These sections are, first, sections 30 and 31, which require that a health information custodian disclose personal health information upon the direction of the minister. Although the minister is obliged to consider the public interest and the privacy interests of the individual, and the privacy commissioner is to be consulted in the process, our interpretation of the section suggests that the minister has independent authority to direct and require compliance.

The bill purports to confer powers to the privacy commissioner, however the commissioner's role is more of an adviser. If the commissioner considers that a direction is inappropriate, there appears to be no mechanism in place to influence ministerial discretion, provided that the direction is consistent with the purpose of collection and disclosure.

While access to information that is necessary for effective management of the health care system is important for the government, the guiding principles of accountability and consent should not be overlooked.

The association questions the need to disclose the identity of individuals for the purposes of health management and research. Anonymous information should be sufficient to accomplish the objects requiring disclosure. Perhaps the committee can consider a mechanism for the review and approval of a ministerial direction through a body with some public accountability, similar to the proposed research ethics review body.

Secondly, section 32, in part, establishes by regulation a research ethics review body responsible for the approval of the disclosure of personal health information for research purposes, and subsection 76(1), paragraph 15, designates "a body or a class of bodies as a research ethics review body for the purpose of section 32." However, the paragraph is non-specific as to the composition of the review body. As an assurance of public accountability, and to ensure that health information is collected and used appropriately, the association recommends that there should be some statutory requirement for representation from the public sector on a research ethics review body.

Thirdly, subsection 47(1), in part, requires that a fee accompany a written request for access to personal health information. The association supports this provision. The requirement for a fee to accompany the request for access to a record will protect practitioners from patients who refuse to pay a fee once they have obtained their records. The establishment of a reasonable fee will be difficult considering the various health information custodians and the variety of records. We anticipate that the profession will retain some autonomy in the determination of fees for record access and transfer.

Subsection (4) of the same section, and part II, subsection 11(2), appear to exempt the requirement for non-disclosure under the authority of the Regulated Health Professions Act, 1991.

The association recommends that the provisions for non-disclosure in proceedings under the proposed bill be extended to the quality assurance program under the RHPA. It appears that under Bill 159 there are requirements for non-disclosure of evidence in proceedings, but that doesn't apply to the RHPA in quality assurance programs. We would like to see that apply universally under the requirements of Bill 159. The association recommends that the provisions for non-disclosure apply as well to the RHPA.

In summary, with the exception of certain specific disclosure requirements, the association is satisfied that Bill 159 offers adequate protection of privacy for personal health information. The proposed act is unusually comprehensive compared to present confidentiality requirements under profession-specific acts. New rules for access, use and disclosure will unfortunately create additional administrative responsibilities for practitioners over and above the requirements under present regulations. Consequently, all health information custodians will require considerable knowledge and understanding of their responsibilities under the new legislation or risk significant penalty.

The challenge for both the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care and health care professional organizations will be the task of educating health information custodians on their broadened responsibilities. The association is prepared to assist our members with compliance to their expanded requirements.

Thank you for your interest and attention.

The Chair: That leaves us just under three minutes per caucus for questions. This time we'll start with Ms Pupatello.

Mrs Sandra Pupatello (Windsor West): Thanks so much for your presentation. Could I understand from your remarks that the powers within the RHPA with the colleges in terms of their investigative powers etc-you can see the need to keep that level of access for the colleges and that's the level that ought to be in Bill 159?

Dr Nicol: The comment I made was related to the requirements for practitioners to maintain confidentiality and access to records for patients. However, if I understand your question, your question is what powers will a college have with respect to obtaining information directly.

Mrs Pupatello: Several of the colleges have come forward to say that it literally clips their wings in terms of their mandate and what they're supposed to do, and that is, ensure the quality of service delivered by their professionals. They need these access powers in order to do proper investigations, and it's essentially clipped with Bill 159. It makes one essentially redundant.

Let me ask you about some comments you made regarding the commissioner and the role of the commissioner. Just to emphasize, many of those who have come forward suggest that, if 159 passes, the role of the commissioner would be very restricted in a number of ways. I don't know how practical it would be, but it seems to me if the commissioner could actually vet all of these health custodians' requests in terms of access and flip the responsibility around so that while they're listed as custodians, their request to information still needs to be vetted by the commissioner, that may be of significant comfort to everyone who realizes the number of people who are listed as custodians. While they're listed, they still don't have the power unless the commissioner approves the access and/or disclosure of health records. Do you have a comment on that?

Dr Nicol: I would support that. I would support giving the privacy commissioner more authority. However, as I read the bill, it doesn't appear that the commissioner has any authority over ministerial directions at all. It's only to act as an adviser and comment on it. So there don't appear to be any checks and balances on the minister's power.

Mrs Pupatello: I guess we're going to hear again later from the Ontario commissioner, but she made her point fairly strenuously when she appeared here a couple of weeks back. It would take a significant rewriting of the role of the commissioner within Bill 159.

Ms Lankin: Thank you for your presentation, Dr Nicol. I think you hit the nail right on the head when you talked about the lack of power vested in the commissioner to oversee this legislation, to enforce this legislation, combined with the very broad discretionary powers of direction to disclose which the minister has within this bill.

I understand the premise of Ms Pupatello's question. We could ask Dr Cavoukian herself, but there are millions of requests for access to information every year and it would take perhaps the Ministry of Health's size doubled and half of it put with the privacy commissioner to accomplish that. But having said that, the rules as they're set out-and we've heard this over and over from people-are much too broad. They need to be tightened and the commissioner needs to be given new powers.

I wondered if I could ask you about your proposal that perhaps, even with tightening the rules, there should be some oversight body that reviews the minister's directions to disclose. You suggest it could be an independent, arm's-length body. One of the things I'd worry about is that the whole world of health is kind of an incestuous world. Those of us who spend a lot of time in it know the lingo, get the sense of it, and we're quite expedient in terms of our thinking that certain pieces of information are needed for certain research or for systems management, yet that's not the public's point of view. Do you think you could actually put together an oversight body like that which wouldn't get drawn into the world of health, or do you think it's best to leave that oversight power with the privacy commissioner, whose sole focus, of course, is dealing with information, both freedom of information-to access it-and protection of privacy, where it should be protected?

1040

Dr Nicol: Not to create additional bureaucracy, if the privacy commissioner has the expertise and authority to oversee some of the powers of the minister, I think that would be quite satisfactory. In the alternative, you could create another body, but if the minister's direction involves a lot of requirements, as you say, that's going to make a lot of work for another body.

Ms Lankin: One of the things we've heard over and over again is that health information belongs to the individual. It's our private health information and we have a right to have access to that. In your brief, you present support for the fact that there should be a fee to accompany a request for access to patient records and that the health profession should retain autonomy over the determination of that fee. We've heard very significant presentations here about how fees can be a real barrier to access and that in fact there should be a statutory system that not only keeps it affordable and accessible, but has measures for waiving fees altogether. I worry about your suggestion that health professionals should retain autonomy. That could lead to differences from doctor's office to optometrist's office to nurse practitioner's office. Could you comment on that?

Dr Nicol: Usually the practitioners will determine what fee is reasonable for services they provide. I think some access to records or information may take a lot of time and involve a lot of work on behalf of the practitioner, and some others may just be writing a note and giving that to the patient. If you have a fee established by someone else, then practitioners may not receive adequate remuneration for those services they're providing. I'm not suggesting there should be a fee that would prohibit access to information by patients, but considering the services that practitioners provide, there should be some fair remuneration for those services.

Ms Lankin: I guess it's a question of whose record it is, the patient's or the practitioner's.

Dr Nicol: It's the patient's.

Mr Wood: You've made some comments in your submission about oversighted research. One model we could consider would be to say that the final sign-off on all research projects where you're accessing information without consent is the privacy commissioner. Is that a model that appeals to you?

Dr Nicol: Yes.

Mr Wood: Let me share with you something we've heard. I'm not saying it's right or wrong. Ultimately, we're going to have to decide whether or not we agree with this submission. Some researchers have said that because of small sample size, there are certain kinds of research you can't do if you require consent. If we find ourselves persuaded by that argument, that there really are research projects of that nature, we've either got to say, "You can do these without consent, subject to proper oversight," or, "You can't do that kind of research in Ontario." If we reach the point where we're faced with that decision, which side of that would you come down on?

Dr Nicol: As long as there are sufficient checks and balances on the disclosure of information without consent, and it's absolutely necessary, then I'm in favour of that. But as I see it now, as I read the bill, it doesn't appear to be that. Although there is an ethics review body, I don't see where the constitution of that body is clear. Are you suggesting that the commissioner, then, be an overview for the release of that information? That's satisfactory.

Mr Wood: The proposal, I think, is to set up the composition by regulation. The government is going to say, "Here's how these have to be composed." It does, however, raise the question, who exactly are these people? To whom are they accountable?

Dr Nicol: That's my question. That's right.

Mr Wood: An answer to that, which I gather from your previous answer appeals to you, is, "We'll make it a public official, who after all is accountable to the Legislature, is confirmed by the Legislature when he or she is appointed." I gather you find that kind of public official to be a better final sign-off person than simply people who would be appointed under regulation.

Dr Nicol: Yes.

Mr Wood: I gather you ultimately would do the research and take the information rather than decline to do certain types of research in Ontario, if we reached that point.

Dr Nicol: I'm sorry, I didn't understand that question.

Mr Wood: If we got to the point that I described earlier, where you've got to decide, "Either we're not going to do the research in Ontario or we're going to permit disclosure without consent," you would, in the right circumstances, permit the research to proceed.

Dr Nicol: Permit it to proceed, provided there are checks and balances on that disclosure, yes.

The Chair: Thank you very much for coming before us here this morning. We appreciate it.

OMBUDSMAN ONTARIO

The Chair: Our next presentation will be from Mr Clare Lewis, the Ombudsman of Ontario. Good morning and welcome to the committee.

Mr Clare Lewis: Thank you, Mr Gilchrist, members. If I may, Ms Laura Pettigrew, counsel in my office, is with me. She might be needed.

Thank you for receiving me this morning. It's a pleasure to be before you. I can tell you that I expect, subject to any questions you may have, to be somewhat less than 10 minutes.

I'm very much a one-trick pony in this appearance. I am here to seek the removal of ambiguity regarding an authority which I believe I have under this act but is unclear. As a matter of principle, I generally support the jealous guarding of personal health information, but I do have a specific concern regarding Bill 159 as it relates to my office and my investigative authority. Although I recognize the need for and support having clear rules respecting the privacy of personal health information, it appears that the proposed legislation may impair my ability to conduct investigations of provincial governmental organizations.

As you know, I have the authority to conduct investigations relating to a broad range of provincial governmental organizations including the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care and agencies such as the Health Professions Appeal and Review Board and the Health Services Appeal and Review Board. Provincial correctional facilities, which include health care units, also come within my jurisdiction. Relevant personal health information, including third party information, is often obtained in the course of my investigations of provincial organizations. I frequently conduct investigations on my own motion, particularly in cases involving systemic or system-wide issues impacting a large group of individuals. In these circumstances, it is critical that I have full access to relevant personal health information without the need to obtain consent.

The Ombudsman of necessity has been given broad statutory powers of investigation. It is fundamental that I continue to have full access to personal health information in order to fulfill my role and ensure that government is accountable in its administration. To be truly effective, an oversight body, including, I might add, the Information and Privacy Commissioner, requires legislative authority to conduct thorough investigations relating to the issues within its mandate to consider. I note an anomalous departure from that principle in that under the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act and Bill 159, the Information and Privacy Commissioner is not empowered to conduct full investigations into matters relating to privacy complaints. In the case of my office, while I have statutory powers of investigation, I am concerned that my authority will be restricted as a practical result of Bill 159.

I would like to assure the committee that I appreciate the sensitivity relating to personal health information. However, the Ombudsman Act and regulations contain strong confidentiality provisions to ensure that the information obtained in my investigations is not unnecessarily disclosed. I took an oath of confidentiality when assuming office in accordance with subsection 12(1) of the Ombudsman Act. Every member of my staff is bound by my obligations of confidentiality. Subsection 18(2) of the Ombudsman Act requires that my investigations be conducted in private and section 2 of regulation 865 provides that neither my staff nor I can disclose information to third parties except when permitted by the act.

1050

My office is also not an institution subject to FIPPA. Accordingly, members of the public cannot obtain disclosure of information within my custody and control through an access request to my office under FIPPA.

It will no doubt be argued that clauses 36(1)(h) and (i) of Bill 159 permit my office to obtain information, as disclosure is permitted to a person carrying out an investigation authorized under an act of Ontario or if required under an act of Ontario. However, allow me to advise you of my office's practical experience with FIPPA, the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act. Based on this experience, I believe that the interaction between Bill 159 and the Ombudsman Act will lead to my office having increased difficulty accessing relevant personal health information.

FIPPA was amended in January 1991 to delete reference to the Ombudsman's office in a section permitting disclosure of personal information for certain purposes. At that time, the reference to my office was considered redundant in light of the general exemption in that legislation, FIPPA, authorizing disclosure for the purpose of complying with an act of the Legislature. A memorandum in support of that principle from the director of the freedom of information and privacy branch, Management Board of Cabinet, to all information and privacy officers of government dated November 18, 1991, confirmed that the Ombudsman continued to be authorized to require access to personal information. In addition, on June 19, 1992, the Information and Privacy Commissioner, then an assistant commissioner, responded to a complaint concerning disclosure of personal information to my office by finding that the disclosure was indeed permitted under FIPPA.

Despite the information from Management Board of Cabinet and the Information and Privacy Commissioner's office and the section of FIPPA which permits disclosure to my office, I continue to experience resistance when attempting to obtain access to information, particularly personal health information, without formal written consent from the individual to whom it relates. It is a credit to those officials who resist my requests that they are attempting to follow the rules and exercise due caution, but they do so incorrectly and based on a misconception of the law, in my respectful opinion.

Unless Bill 159 clearly refers to disclosure to the Ombudsman being permitted, and there is no room for ambiguity, I foresee, based on my office's past experience, that I will face resistance in my investigations involving personal health information.

I note that in section 36 of the proposed legislation, reference is made to a number of organizations to which a health information custodian may disclose personal health information. In order to ensure that I continue to have the necessary access to relevant personal health information, including third party information, without the need to obtain consent, I believe that specific reference should be made in the proposed legislation to my office being permitted disclosure.

Accordingly, I believe it is necessary that Bill 159 expressly provide that a health information custodian may disclose personal health information without consent to the Ombudsman for the purpose of enabling me to carry out my functions under the Ombudsman Act. The best way to accomplish this, in my view, is to add a separate section to the legislation, in part II, which addresses the application of the act, stating, "Nothing in this act shall apply to prevent or restrict disclosure of personal health information to the Ombudsman of Ontario."

I believe that the confidentiality provisions in the Ombudsman Act and the integrity of my investigative process strike a balance between the public interest in having an Ombudsman with the right of access to personal health information and the private interests of individuals in having their personal health information protected. I believe that Bill 159 intends to preserve that balance. However, my own experience has shown that in the very sensitive area of personal health information, any legislative uncertainty will inevitably lead to challenges to my investigative authority.

Thank you for your consideration. I would be pleased to receive any questions you may have.

The Acting Chair (Mr Toby Barrett): Thank you, Mr Lewis, for that presentation. That would leave about three minutes for each caucus.

Mr Lewis: I must have underestimated my time.

The Acting Chair: Extra time for questions.

Mr Lewis: Oh, for each caucus. That's not bad.

The Acting Chair: For each caucus. Ms Lankin, any comments or questions?

Ms Lankin: Absolutely. Thank you very much. Welcome, Mr Lewis and Ms Pettigrew. I appreciate the point that you have drawn to our attention. It parallels in some ways the concerns that the regulated health professionals' colleges have raised with us, their concerns that the construction of the bill may interfere with their duty and obligation right to investigate in certain circumstances. The ministry has assured us that it was not their intent, and I think you recognize that it would not be their intent, to interfere with your powers at all. I believe there is a way that we can construct the bill that will address those concerns.

Having said that, I have a couple of questions. Could you give us some examples in terms of the kind of complaints that you may have received and investigated in the past that actually required you to look at personal health information as opposed to facility procedures or policies?

Mr Lewis: Yes, indeed, I can. I could use the correctional institutions as an example, and I deal a lot with those. Health care is a very real issue in those institutions and we do receive complaints of inadequate health care which must be investigated. On occasion, there is a need to do an investigation on a system-wide basis to determine if the type of health care that the institution is claiming is being granted is being granted generally or not. In order to ascertain that, I need to look at the health records of other persons who have been incarcerated in that or other institutions in order to make a comparison of the complaint. The fact that I look at it does not mean that it will be revealed. I'm quite capable of anonymizing, I think is the word, any information I receive.

Ms Lankin: Let me just ask you: could it be anonymized before you look at it?

Mr Lewis: It wouldn't bother me, as long as I had assurance that it was an accurate record of another individual that I needed to look at in order to make comparisons. Yes, I believe so.

Ms Lankin: The proposal that you've put forward to us in terms of a recommended amendment-and it may work in that construct, at least the idea behind it-have you had a discussion with the privacy commissioner about that and is she comfortable with your recommendation?

Mr Lewis: I have spoken to the privacy commissioner and I'll certainly have to leave it to her to comment on it, but I felt as a courtesy I needed to go before her and to find out what her opinion would be because I didn't want to transgress. I don't think she's uncomfortable with it. I think she is comfortable, but please ask her that question.

Ms Lankin: We'll do that.

Mr Wood: If we were to accede to your request, there are a few issues that arise from that and I'd like to get your reaction to a few issues that we might have to address. Suppose we allowed access without consent with a sign-off by the privacy commissioner. What would you think of that?

Mr Lewis: It's an interesting jurisdictional issue. We officers of the Legislature don't often find ourselves subject to being approved by the other, but it's something I would certainly consider and I'd be willing to get back to you on.

Mr Wood: What about sign-off by the courts?

Mr Lewis: I think that's more cumbersome. There have been occasions in the past, I believe, when we've come very close in our office-not during my time-to actually going to the courts to assert our jurisdiction. We think it's there under FIPPA and we think it's there under this act, but it's not well recognized as there. I would be prepared, if necessary, and in a significant enough case, to take the matter to a court to assert my jurisdiction. But I wouldn't think that we'd want to go to the court on a regular basis because I know you know, sir, how expensive and resource-intensive and lengthy that process can be. The Information and Privacy Commissioner would be preferable, in my view, and in fact much more expert.

Mr Wood: There are a few restrictions we might place on your ability to access information without consent. For example, a third party might have to decide it was a needed investigation. The courts or the privacy commissioner might have to decide first whether or not it's a needed investigation.

Mr Lewis: I would take some considerable exception to that. That has never been the expectation of this Ombudsman Act or any other that I'm familiar with in the western world, that the courts make the determination whether an investigation is necessary. I'm subject to the Legislature and the Legislature can certainly tell me if they think that I have erred in initiating improper investigations. But I don't believe that I would agree with your proposition that the courts ought to look at that.

1100

Mr Wood: What about you not being able to access more information than is needed to achieve your purpose? In other words, a third party decides what that is, that you don't decide yourself.

Mr Lewis: The Ombudsman is supposed to be the oversight agency on governmental organization. The Legislature has granted the Ombudsman a certain degree of integrity and capacity to make those decisions, just as has been granted to other officers of the Legislature, such as the Provincial Auditor, the elections commissioner and so on. I think what you're saying is who shall watch the watcher.

Mr Wood: That's right.

Mr Lewis: I used to be the police complaints commissioner in this province, too, and while I had to take my slings and arrows in the public forum, and I would as Ombudsman before this House, I don't believe that that encumbrance would be appropriate. In fact, I think it would undermine the concept of the Ombudsman very significantly.

Mr Wood: Who would you suggest should guard the guard?

Mr Lewis: You. I report to you. I report to you through the Speaker. I appear before the standing committee of the Legislative Assembly.

Mr Wood: That's hardly a practical matter in each case.

Mr Lewis: In each case?

Mr Wood: How often do you report to the Legislature?

Mr Lewis: I report annually, but I have instituted an appearance before the standing committee on a quarterly basis and I would go on any occasion that they requested.

Mr Wood: What about a restriction that you can't access information if your purposes could be achieved with anonymized information?

Mr Lewis: I'm sorry. Would you repeat that?

Mr Wood: We could put into the statute a provision that you can't access information if you could achieve your purpose with anonymized information.

Mr Lewis: I'd still be accessing the information, but I'd be accessing it in an anonymized fashion. Yes, I think I've agreed that it is perhaps possible. I would request that that be third party information, not the information of the complainant who I am supposedly investigating for at that point.

Mrs Pupatello: A quick question for you, Ombudsman. It was a pleasure to listen to your presentation today. The experience I've had with your office-and we have many constituents we refer to the Ombudsman-is that you currently have lengthy investigations and it's never an overnight response, for a whole bunch of reasons. One, I think, is resourcing to your office and satellite offices. Is the reason for the significant delay today in some of your investigations due to this difficulty in access?

I guess I'll preface that by saying throughout these proceedings I think the general public is becoming aware of a number of people who have been able to access records already that we frankly weren't aware of, but through virtue of their mandate they can access, and yours may well be one of them. I didn't realize the difficulty that you've had historically in gaining access. Does that cause considerable delay?

Mr Lewis: Perhaps I could divide the layers that I think you've raised. We do in certain individual cases in which we have required personal health information of third parties experience delays of significance because of resistance within the ministry. But I do not think our investigations as a whole are any longer under considerable delay. A huge number, over 75%, of our cases are completed within six days.

Mrs Pupatello: For those that are delayed, are-

Mr Lewis: There are some that are, but we don't have a backlog. Some of these investigations are extraordinarily complex. They really are. I can only say that I'm not trying to lay any delays which are perceived in my office on this issue other than those very few cases-and very significant cases-in which I am denied and a lot of time is taken by me and the ministry in trying to work out the problem.

But I'd like to say, in conclusion, if I may, that I think the act provides me with the authority that I'm asking, but it's not understood to provide me with that authority. I don't want to have to go to court to get it. I don't want to have to keep negotiating these matters, because that's where delay occurs.

Mrs McLeod: If I may, I think the point that you're making is even more important for us to consider if we proceed to make amendments to Bill 159 as it's written. Ms Cavoukian's recommendations for amendments are around 36(1)(h), which I think you say would be the right way-

Mr Lewis: It would be one way of doing it. I also recommended putting it in part II as a separate statement.

Mrs McLeod: I think that recommendation is something the committee should look at very seriously, if we proceed to change that clause (h), which I personally think is far too open in terms of-

Mr Lewis: I understood that.

Mrs McLeod: The recommendation from the privacy commissioner would restrict-as I understand it, clause (h) would now read, "If required for the purpose of an investigation under or enforcement of an enactment of Ontario respecting payment for health care, or ... respecting a fraud relating to payment for health care," which might indeed shut the Ombudsman's office out if we didn't include it specifically somewhere else in the act.

Mr Lewis: That's right.

Mrs McLeod: I think we do need to look very seriously at that.

The Chair: Thank you for that presentation, sir.

INFORMATION AND PRIVACY COMMISSIONER/ONTARIO

The Chair: Our next presentation is from the Ontario Information and Privacy Commissioner, Dr Cavoukian.

Dr Ann Cavoukian: Good morning, Mr Chair and ladies and gentlemen. I am very pleased to have this second opportunity to address the committee regarding Bill 159. I would like to use this opportunity to reinforce the main points from my first presentation and to respond to some of the comments made by the other stakeholders.

Let me begin by saying that I support the many voices that have called for health information privacy legislation. My office has been advocating the need for such legislation, as you know, for a number of years, since the inception of our office in 1987. Along with many other stakeholders, we've been waiting for the introduction of this type of legislation since Justice Krever's report on the royal commission on confidentiality of health information in 1980, over 20 years ago.

However, the need for health privacy legislation has, in my view, never been greater, especially with the increasing electronic exchanges of health information. I was looking, just anecdotally, at a survey that crossed my desk, Computing in the Physician's Practice, which looked at the electronic uses of information by physicians. It said that more doctors are communicating by e-mail with both professional colleagues, up to 55%, and support staff, up to 34%. This includes the transmission of some clinical data. This takes place without any standardized rules or controls. Again, we need this legislation, despite the fact that it is extremely difficult to get right. In my 14 years with this agency, I have personally witnessed at first hand the repeated but failed attempts to introduce this type of bill.

Despite the fact that we are in such serious need of legislation of this kind, we cannot accept a bill which is widely acknowledged as being seriously flawed. Bill 159, in its current form, is without a doubt a flawed bill. In fact, the bill is so flawed that the federal Privacy Commissioner, Mr George Radwanski, has called for it to be scrapped and the process to start anew. Despite the fact that I may disagree with him, I can certainly understand why he would take such a position. Bill 159 needs a major overhaul, not simply a little bit of fine-tuning.

But perhaps the term carpe diem-"seize the day"-may never have been more appropriate than now. The current opportunity to provide Ontarians with privacy protection for their most sensitive information may be lost if we don't act now, because the process of balancing competing interests is not going to get any easier the next time around. There's no reason to think that something's going to magically change. This is the first time that a health information privacy bill has ever made it thus far: to the stage of actually being introduced as a bill in the House. So let's try to take advantage of that.

Let me be perfectly clear, however. While I am very much aware of the danger of missing this opportunity before us, I cannot support the passage of Bill 159 in its present form. While it may not be fatally flawed, it is most certainly fundamentally flawed. This bill must be substantially rewritten to provide the types of protections for health information that the public expects and deserves. There is also the danger, again raised by the federal Privacy Commissioner, that this bill will not be deemed to be substantially similar to the new federal private sector privacy legislation, an outcome clearly to be avoided.

1110

I've already offered the resources of my office to work with the ministry until the concerns raised about the bill have been addressed. We are very committed to working with ministry officials to make this a truly privacy protective bill. To this end, my office has already tabled with the committee both a written submission and a list of proposed amendments that we drafted, which are also accessible on our Web site. These documents represent our starting point for discussion. What we need now is a serious commitment from the government to undertake a significant redrafting of the legislation. Without this commitment, I would have no choice but to withdraw my support for the legislation.

Let me now turn to my major areas of concern with the bill. I'll simply touch on these three areas today.

One of the most glaring areas in need of attention is the broad disclosures of personal health information permitted without the consent of the individual. This must be changed.

One of the basic premises of this legislation, as outlined in section 28, is that the consent of the individual should generally be obtained before personal health information is disclosed. However, the legislation contains numerous provisions for the use and disclosure of health information for a wide array of purposes without the consent of the individual. In fact, under this bill, individuals would have very little control over the collection, use and disclosure of their personal health information.

Let me turn to directed disclosure, section 31. Under Bill 159, the government could direct health custodians to disclose any health information to a third party for a wide range of purposes related to the management of the health system. This could be virtually anything and is clearly far too sweeping a power. Because we've seen no convincing evidence from the ministry that it requires such broad powers in order to collect information needed for planning and administrative purposes, I ask that the directed disclosure provisions be removed from Bill 159. Just take it out, full stop.

Let me talk briefly about regulation-making power under Bill 159. The extent to which this legislation creates regulation-making powers is very disturbing to us and it is one area that requires significant amendment. While we understand that some matters must of course be left to regulations-it is neither practical nor desirable to include every minute detail in the body of the legislation-this bill goes too far. Our review indicates that at almost every key decision-making point, the bill includes the ability to deviate from the established rules by way of regulation. In almost every part of the legislation, key issues are left to be addressed later in the regs, again leaving far too much to be decided at a later date in a non-public forum, without opportunities for debate. Overall, the proposed legislation provides the Lieutenant Governor in Council with the power to make regulations in 30 areas. But it's not just the sheer volume of the regulations that gives us cause for concern, but also the scope and the significance of the matters that are left to be addressed at a later time. The regulation-making power, in short, must be narrowed.

Finally, I'm going to touch briefly on the powers of the commissioner, or lack thereof. Part XI, which sets out the oversight and enforcement regime relating to personal health information, raises a number of serious concerns for my office. This part establishes the powers of the commissioner to review complaints under the legislation and to conduct inquiries into complaints about access and correction of personal health information. The provisions in Bill 159 are totally inadequate and fail to provide Ontarians with an effective oversight of their most sensitive information.

I respectfully recommend amending the legislation to ensure that the commissioner's office has clear and explicit powers to do the following: to investigate all complaints; to review decisions of custodians that relate to requests for the correction of one's personal information-this is very important; to conduct privacy audits to ensure compliance with any provision of the act. Without these powers, my office will not be able to effectively carry out its mandate, and many of the public's rights and protections provided under this legislation will be virtually unenforceable.

I should also point out that the federal Privacy Commissioner, Mr Radwanski, possesses these investigatory powers now under Bill C-6, and the absence of these powers in Bill 159 would, I think, serve as a further obstacle to obtaining a determination of being substantially similar with the federal legislation.

When I spoke to this committee last month, I concluded by urging you not to withdraw this bill but rather to make significant amendments to it. Today, the same bill remains in front of the committee for consideration, yet there have been no assurances that significant amendments will be made. I will, therefore, conclude my remarks today by saying that unless fundamental changes are made, I cannot support Bill 159. I ask that you consider the detailed recommendations my office has made in our written submission and the draft language we've proposed for amendments to the bill.

I thank you very much for your consideration, and I'd be pleased to answer whatever questions you may have.

The Chair: That leaves us about three minutes per caucus. This time, we'll start with Mr Wood.

Mr Wood: We've heard a good number of suggestions over the past couple of weeks and a few of them have been to give you some functions you don't have now. I want to get some reaction from you as to whether you might be able to be helpful in these areas. One thing we could do, in circumstances where access is going to be had for research purposes without consent, is to give ultimate sign-off to your office so that each of these projects would be reviewed by, say, an ethics committee, and then it goes to you, who obviously would set the ultimate policy and determine that it was applied in each case. Is that something you think your office could do?

Dr Cavoukian: I think it would have enormous resource implications, Mr Wood. The sheer volume of the projects that would come before us and the expertise we would be required to obtain in order to properly assess such requests would create a lot of resource implications. It's something we would certainly consider. My preference would be to develop some type of guideline that would outline what the privacy considerations would have to be that research ethics review bodies would have to consider.

I think they're very good at what they do in assessing the merits of the research before them, in terms of how worthy it is of the research being contemplated, but I don't think privacy is something they have much expertise in. We could draft a set of guidelines that we could not only distribute but perhaps hold a workshop or have some way in which we could train existing research ethics review boards and thereby give the benefit of our expertise on privacy to them and have that incorporated into their practices.

On the face of it, that would be my first response. I understand the federal Privacy Commissioner doesn't have sign-off on research matters either. Matters go to him and he must be informed of various research activities, but he does not have sign-off. That would be my first reaction.

Mr Wood: For time considerations, let me jump to another issue. One thing we could do is require your sign-off on directed disclosures. What would be your reaction as to your ability to do that?

Dr Cavoukian: It's certainly something we would consider. My first request, as you know, is to eliminate the directed disclosure, because from our perspective we have not been convinced of the need for it. In order for us to understand the need, we would have to have a better understanding of the ministry's reasons for wanting it. We have been exposed to them. It's not that this has taken place in a vacuum. We have different perspectives on the need for this information. It's certainly something we would consider. I'll just reiterate that our preference would be to eliminate the directed disclosures, but certainly narrow them, if not-

The Chair: Sorry, Mr Wood. We have to move on.

Mrs McLeod: I wish we had more time with you, and I trust we will have an opportunity to spend more time with you as we get into the amending process. It's hard to know where to focus a question in three minutes.

1120

I want to note that in your recommendations you've recommended deleting section 12(8), which is the exception on limitations. I'm not going to ask you about that, Ms Cavoukian. I just wanted to note it because I think it goes hand in hand with the recommendation on deleting the directed disclosures and also the circumscribing of regulatory powers and not having access to records without a subpoena.

Although I'd like to discuss all of those things with you, what I wanted to focus on is your recommendation around what I interpret to be a lockbox in section 29(1)(a), that information can be provided etc unless the individual has instructed the custodian not to make the disclosure. I think this is one of the issues that we're all anguishing over, perhaps more than any other single issue. We're hearing from health care providers and others that there are circumstances in which they need to have access to a record, they will argue, for the protection of the individual-but doesn't the individual own the record?-but perhaps of even greater concern, for the protection of others, whether it is somebody who has a physical condition which could put a health care provider at risk or whether, in the case of a mental health condition, it could put people in the larger community at risk. Could you comment on how we deal with those very real concerns?

Dr Cavoukian: From a privacy perspective, the notion of a lockbox or some method in which an individual can control and prevent the disclosure of some information is very important. It maintains control over the uses of one's most sensitive information in the hands of the individual. Privacy hinges on the ability to control such uses of one's information.

Having said that, I recognize your concerns and I'll speak first to physicians' concerns, which are very legitimate. They feel that if they don't have access to everything, their ability to treat a patient may be impeded in some way. They may not be aware of some critical information, which a patient may not know is critical but a physician would be able to set. Having said that, I think arguing in favour of a lockbox comes with a bit of responsibility that has to be taken by the individual to accept the consequences of placing such information in a lockbox. There has to be that understanding that you might place yourself at risk by placing certain information in a lockbox, and you accept that risk.

With respect to danger to others, I've always been a very strong advocate of universal health care precautions which people in emergency units, the police and others are trained in and advised to use in dangerous situations. The reason I say that is that it's not that there isn't a legitimate need on the part of such individuals-if they happen to be in an accident, or something has taken place, and they are concerned about having contracted something-but it's the ability to know with any certainty about the medical conditions the individual from whom the disease in question, or whatever, has been communicated. It's virtually impossible to know what conditions that individual may have.

I'm going to use the example of HIV. I know it's been raised earlier. In order to know if someone has HIV, you have to have a positive finding. Many times, that doesn't exist, so there isn't one source you can go to and find if this individual has an HIV-positive status. You won't get that determination, generally speaking. Most people either haven't been tested or they've been tested anonymously or that finding won't reside with whoever it is you're asking. The ability to get an accurate answer to that question by going to some health care provider or some health source is very limited. So my response would always be, use universal health precautions and, if you're concerned about having been exposed, do what you need to do to protect yourself, because you're not going to have a definitive answer. Obtain the treatment you need. Assume that you may have contracted it and protect yourself, because a definitive answer is simply not going to be available. It doesn't matter where you go to access the information. That's my long answer to your question, Mrs McLeod.

Mrs McLeod: I suspect that it's also my time, Mr Chair.

The Chair: More than so.

Ms Lankin: I want to primarily talk about process from this point out. I think-and I'll speak for myself-I have been convinced, and I suspect from the questions and comments Mrs McLeod and Mrs Pupatello have made, they've been convinced, and other members of the committee, that we need to deal with the issue of the powers of the commissioner, we need to deal with the issue of unfettered regulation-making powers, we need to tighten up or eliminate directed disclosure-something has to happen there-and the issue about greater control by the individual. I think the extent to which that goes is still something we are all struggling with. I really do appreciate your comments about seize the day. Every group that has come forward has said, "We need this legislation." They may have said, "Scrap it, rewrite it," but "We need the legislation." We do not want to miss an opportunity to put our minds to the very difficult job ahead of redrafting and making a workable piece of legislation.

The committee itself has proposed that a subcommittee, a representative from each caucus, together with the Chair of the committee, meet with ministry staff and begin the process of reviewing the submissions we've heard, prioritizing some of the areas that we think need to be addressed, giving some of our recommendations to the ministry and the parliamentary assistant to go back and talk to the minister, and we've offered to keep involved in an ongoing process there. You may know there are rumours that the House may prorogue. The bill may die on the order table in any event, but that doesn't mean the redrafting can't go on and it doesn't mean that we as a group can't meet as MPPs who are volunteering to be involved on an ongoing basis even if we're not formally constituted as a subcommittee.

Does your office have any interest in being part of those discussions with the three committee members and the ministry staff as we're trying to sift through the information, see where there is consensus, where there are differences and narrow the issues down?

Dr Cavoukian: Very much so. I would appreciate the opportunity to participate in such an exercise. As you know, my office has reviewed this bill at great length and has really turned their mind to what are some appropriate amendments we could consider. So we would be very pleased to participate and offer you whatever assistance we can.

Ms Lankin: There is one piece of actual advice that I think would be very helpful for us if you and your staff have the opportunity to take a look at this. In a few of the presentations we have been told to look to a document that is model state health privacy information that has been prepared by two university professors from Georgetown University in the States. A copy of that has been available to the committee, so the clerk could give that to you. We've also been referred to the Minnesota legislation and have been told that is model legislation. We have asked legislative research to prepare a summary and comparison of those pieces of legislation with Bill 159, looking at the philosophical underpinnings and the major similarities or differences.

If your office could take a look at those two as well and provide your comments to the committee, I think that would be tremendously helpful to us.

Dr Cavoukian: Done. We'll do it. We may already have done it and I don't know about it.

Ms Lankin: Thank you very much.

Mrs McLeod: Mr Chair, I don't want to extend the questioning. I appreciate the fact that the time has expired but I'm wondering whether the committee would consider asking the privacy commissioner as well to give some consideration and advice to the committee on a new issue that we haven't had a chance to consider before and it falls out of the hearings we had yesterday and the case that was raised by Mr Murray about access to records and the government's initial response is to consider the mailing of OHIP statements to individuals.

We're the group that's been dealing with privacy issues now for some time. I do believe that potentially raises some very significant privacy issues in terms of who could in fact be the recipient of a mailed record. I'm not sure that it's something that needs to be addressed in legislation but it does raise an issue that I think we need to at least consider in the legislative process, and I'm wondering if the commissioner would be prepared to give some thought to that and to the ability to protect privacy in the event of that being a direction the government goes.

Dr Cavoukian: We have already turned our mind to it. As soon as I learned of that, of course the privacy considerations were top of mind. We're presently preparing a written piece on that and we have contemplated a model that would be much more privacy protected in the event that direction was pursued. We'd be glad to forward that to you.

The Chair: Thank you very much. We appreciate that. We thank you for appearing before us again today.

1130

INSURANCE BUREAU OF CANADA

The Chair: Our next presenter will be Mr George Henry.

Seeing no sign of Mr Henry, the Insurance Bureau of Canada is next on our list. I'll ask them to come forward. Good morning and welcome to the committee.

Mr Mark Yakabuski: Good morning. Thank you very much, Mr Chair. My name is Mark Yakabuski. I am the Ontario vice-president of the Insurance Bureau of Canada. With me this morning is Lee Samis, who is legal counsel to the Insurance Bureau of Canada.

First of all, I would like to express my pleasure in being able to appear before this committee to address some of the issues in Bill 159. This is an important bill. The protection of personal information, including personal health information, is a preoccupation of long standing with the auto insurers of Ontario whom I represent this morning.

The Insurance Bureau of Canada represents the auto, home and business insurers of Canada. We represent an industry with a premium base of about $20 billion, providing employment directly to about 40,000 people here in Ontario. As part of our membership, we represent the automobile insurance industry. We insure over seven million vehicles in the province of Ontario. Just to put this in perspective, there are more insured drivers in Ontario than there are taxpayers in the province. So when we talk about auto insurance and how it impacts on people across this province, we're talking about something that is of very real importance indeed.

Having said all that, I also want to point out that auto insurers are today major payers of health care services. You may or may not be aware of the fact that since 1990 Ontario has had some kind of no-fault auto insurance system under which those who are injured in an auto accident receive health care and other benefits required to return to them health according to a schedule of benefits which is set by the Legislature and which is administered by auto insurers. As a result of that no-fault system which Ontario has had in varying ways since 1990, the cost of health care for the auto insurance system has ballooned much faster than health care costs in the public sector have, for example.

In 1991, the first full year of no-fault insurance in Ontario, health care costs for auto insurers were $312 million. In 1999, health care costs for auto insurers were $887 million, and those costs continue to increase by double digits each year. So we are very large payers of health care in the province of Ontario. In fact, an interesting thing to note: auto insurers are the largest purchasers of rehabilitative health care in Ontario, significantly larger than the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care and the Workplace Safety and Insurance Board combined.

We deal with health information, therefore, on a daily basis. I want to assure you, first of all, that it is not dealt with haphazardly. We are mandated by the Financial Services Commission of Ontario to collect data on all insurance claims, including health care claims. This data is communicated from a health care provider to an insurance company, which is obligated under the Insurance Act of Ontario to pass on this information to the Insurance Information Centre of Canada, which aggregates this information and then publishes this information under the auspices of the Financial Services Commission of Ontario. In other words, we collect information; it happens in a highly regulated context, but we are dealing with substantial amounts of health information, given the fact that on a yearly basis we pay for health care benefits for approximately 66,000 injured accident victims.

I think it's important to note that the health care information we are dealing with is not, in most cases, the personal health record or file of Mme X or Mr Y. It is billing information which we get from health care providers who are providing physiotherapy, chiropractic care, occupational therapy, speech-language therapy, these sorts of things. We get the information via the billings, in most cases, that these practitioners of course send on to the insurance company to pay.

We collect lots of information and the privacy of this information is of utmost importance to us. We have had a privacy code in the property and casualty insurance sector since 1992. That code was originally drafted according to the OECD guidelines on privacy of the day.

We subsequently participated directly and very closely in the exercise, along with a number of other public and private agencies, in developing the Canadian Standards Association model code for the protection of personal information. We were deeply involved in that exercise, and that finally resulted in a national privacy standard, as you might know, which was made public in March 1996. Subsequent to that, we revised our original privacy code to ensure that it conformed with the new national standard, and in February 1997, our new privacy code was certified by the CSA as being in compliance with the new national standard.

We run consumer information centres across Canada as part of our function. In 1998, for example, we received almost 120,000 consumer calls on various insurance-related issues. Of those many thousands of calls, 549, or less than one half of 1%, dealt with privacy issues and the vast majority of those were requests for information only.

I hope I'm giving you a context here for the fact that we are major payers of health care, we are major recipients of health care information, and the privacy of that information is something we take very seriously. Having said that, I want to make some general comments about privacy legislation here in Ontario and more specifically later the bill you have in front of you.

It is very important from our perspective that any privacy legislation dealing with health information and other information be harmonized with the federal legislation, Bill C-6, and with the other provincial legislation regarding privacy across the country. As you will appreciate, Ontario is the largest head office centre in Canada, Toronto specifically. Many of our companies operate across many of the different provinces, and therefore our ability to provide insurance cost-effectively is dependent on there being some level of harmonization in the laws and regulations which we must obey across the country. We have worked very hard with insurance regulators across the country to get insurance regulation more harmonized across the country. We would hate to face a situation today where suddenly, having achieved a much greater level of harmonization in most other legislation, we are faced with repeating 11 solitudes of privacy legislation which companies have to respect. Moreover, if this legislation is not substantially similar to Bill C-6, the federal legislation, then we are all going to have a substantially greater problem on our hands. That's a general comment: being able to harmonize our legislation in Ontario with that of other provinces, and most importantly with the federal legislation, is a very important objective.

1140

The other thing I would say, by way of a general comment, is that this legislation dealing specifically with the protection of personal health information must synchronize with whatever the government brings forward with respect to general privacy legislation as promised when the Ministry of Consumer and Commercial Relations went out with its discussion paper last summer and fall. We submitted comments on that discussion paper. The ability to synchronize these two pieces of legislation will be of great importance to the auto insurance industry and to businesses throughout this province.

What the Legislature will need to take account of, as it looks at this bill and whatever further iterations we might see, is the fact that we are dealing, particularly here in Ontario, with a very complex health care system where the components are increasingly interdependent.

You may or may not know that while the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care this year has an operating budget of $22.5 billion, there is an additional $10 billion being spent on health care in Ontario in the private sector. We are dealing with a health care complex in Ontario of considerably greater dimensions than $30 billion. One of the largest components of this private sector health care is that of the auto insurance industry. As I said, this year we will probably come close to spending $1 billion on health care claims for injured auto accident victims. It's absolutely essential that there be some measure of coordination between the different components of this system.

When we're dealing with an auto accident victim, for example, we have to understand that at any given time there will probably be three or four different payers of health care involved in trying to get that person better. If that person has to go to the hospital or see a doctor, hospital and physician costs are paid for by OHIP. Each year, auto insurers pay the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care $80 million in lieu of those health care costs, but the front-line costs are paid by OHIP. When that person comes out of hospital and physician care, they will need the services of a chiropractor, a physiotherapist, an occupational therapist, any number of other health care practitioners. That person's employer or employee health care package will pay up to the limits of health care for that portion, and all additional health care costs will be paid for by that person's auto insurer.

Here we have, on a daily basis, at least three or four different components of the health care system treating exactly the same person for the same injuries, and yet today, with a health care complex worth more than $30 billion in Ontario, we have no capacity whatsoever to evaluate billings from one part of the system to another, to communicate basic billing data from one part of the system to the other.

I don't know about you, but I suspect most taxpayers are going to say, "That's not good enough." We absolutely need a system in place that protects the personal privacy of health information, but which at the same time permits the kind of basic data sharing that is necessary to manage what is an increasingly complex and costly system. Otherwise, there is absolutely no way for us to be accountable for the $22.5 billion we're spending in the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care and the $10 billion we're spending in the private sector, and that $10 billion we're spending in the private sector touches absolutely every one of us. For example, as I've mentioned, there are seven million insured vehicles in Ontario. If we are not able to properly manage health care costs in the auto insurance system, that is going to impact on absolutely every resident of this province.

It is essential, in our estimation, whatever health care privacy legislation we come up with, that it also permit the kind of basic data sharing that is essential for proper management of our health care system.

We are trying to help in better managing this very complex health care system in Ontario by working on developing a standard invoice, for example, for the auto insurance system. Anyone who bills for health care in the auto insurance system will have to bill according to a standard invoice. That currently is not the case, and there is no way currently where we can actually measure how much money is being spent on specific health care services in the auto insurance system. I don't believe that's good enough for our policyholders. So we are working with the Financial Services Commission of Ontario and with health care providers in Ontario to develop a standard way of making these billings so that they can be properly measured, so that certain fundamental data can go into a database and be available for the analysis and management of health care programs.

To the degree that Bill 159 does at least conceptually permit certain forms of data sharing, we think that these ideas should be applauded and perhaps further developed as this legislation goes forward.

Let me turn to specific comments on Bill 159. Clause 38(2)(d) of the legislation continues a provision that is now found in the Health Cards and Numbers Control Act permitting certain people to use the OHIP number-the health number, as it is called-for other purposes as prescribed by regulation. We think it's important to continue this provision in whatever privacy legislation we have for personal health information.

This would be a major improvement over what currently exists, for example, in our trying to develop a standard invoice. If because of the constant interaction between OHIP and the auto insurance system and other health care payers, we were all able to use a common health number, that would assist dramatically in being able to communicate, as I say, basic billing data from one part of the system to the other. So to the degree that this section permits the use of the health number in these prescribed instances, we think that is something that should be applauded.

I might point out to you that there's currently an initiative underway across Canada, which is being sponsored by the Canadian Institute for Health Information, in developing a national standard for the electronic communication of health care billing. The ability to use common health numbers would greatly assist in this process.

Similarly, we like generally the provisions to be found in subsection 30(2) of the bill. This section allows a health information custodian to disclose certain information for certain public policy purposes. We think that's important. There are some public policy purposes that have to be recognized. This section, for example, recognizes the importance of evaluating and monitoring programs, allocating resources, doing future planning, and detecting, monitoring and preventing fraud, for example. We think these are important objectives. However, in our view, this section is worded probably in a way that would not adequately capture the activities that insurers routinely engage in in order to analyze health care outcomes, services etc. It seems that this section is directed specifically at being able to analyze or evaluate a specific custodian's programs or services, and not directed at being able to perform a wider analysis of health care services in general.

The Chair: Mr Yakabuski, we've actually gone overtime. Might I invite you to make a final point?

1150

Mr Yakabuski: As you will find in my brief, we make suggestions in four areas. Section 30 should be amended in order to clarify the application of that section. We suggest that there be new clauses inserted into the bill which would allow for the proper detecting and prevention of insurance fraud, which costs insurance customers about $1.3 billion a year. We like the distinction between recipient and health information custodian. We point out that the Ministry of Health is a major direct provider of health care; the Ontario auto insurance industry is not. Therefore, the distinction is very important.

We also suggest that there be an amendment to subsection 24(3) which specifically will say that you're able to disclose information to other people involved in the course of doing the business for which the disclosure was made, taking into account that in the case of the insurance business, for example, in trying to settle claims, we involve lawyers, we involve adjusters, we involve investigators-all kinds of other professional people. They are an integral part of the settling of claims; therefore, that clause should be broadened to take that into account.

My last point would be that the bill has to set out some appropriate transition measures, because in many instances when you introduce privacy legislation, you may well require all kinds of groups to go out and get additional consents that they would not currently have because currently they're not required. There are no transition steps in this bill, and we think that would be an important addition to whatever legislation you ultimately come up with. Thank you very much.

The Chair: Thank you very much for your presentation. We appreciate it.

GEORGE HENRY

The Chair: Now we will go back on our agenda: Mr George Henry. Good morning and welcome to the committee.

Mr George Henry: Thank you. Sorry for being late; I was in the wrong room.

I would like to respond to Bill 159. I do not believe this bill should be passed for a number of reasons. First, I feel that it's an injustice to pass a bill which would allow information to be left on a person's record when that information is deemed untrue. These health records are not only essential at the time they are created, but also are very important for future references.

It is also my opinion that the entire system be fixed before amendments are made. I personally have trouble with regard to my health records. While I was under the care of the province of Ontario-the children's aid society-I was infected with hepatitis. For 38 years I was not notified of this disease which I carried. Over the years I may have infected many other people unknowingly. In the 1960s, the Minister of Health, the Honourable Dr Dymond, wrote a report to the Governor General of Canada stating that anyone who had infectious hepatitis, which I have, should be notified. Neither I nor my family were ever notified of this disease which I carry.

It is also my opinion that there should be only two people who have a person's medical records: the doctor and the patient. I feel that the government should have no right to infringe on the privacy of any Canadian citizen; for instance, through medical records. The information in a person's health record is very personal and should only be used when needed for medical purposes.

In conclusion, I strongly disagree with the passing of Bill 159. I also feel that drastic changes should be made to ensure that all Canadians are given correct information with regard to their own health records. Thank you very much.

The Chair: If you're interested in taking questions, we certainly have a few minutes.

Mr Henry: Yes.

Mrs McLeod: I appreciate your presentation. I hope that we've made some progress in recent years and that this legislation can be changed in ways that will respect the concern for privacy, as well as access to your own records, that you've expressed.

Mr Henry: It took me over a year to get these records through there, right, which I shouldn't have had to go through.

Mrs McLeod: I appreciate that. Certainly, one of the concerns we've been dealing with around the committee table, and we've heard from other presenters, is that people need both access to their records and the ability to correct inaccuracies on their records. Those are both issues that I believe the committee will want to address. Thank you very much.

Ms Lankin: I don't have a specific question. I want to thank you for coming, though. I think that as we've heard from individual citizens who have come forward, overwhelmingly the sentiment we've heard is that there have to be strong protections for privacy and strong rights of access to the information. With those of us who are immersed in the system, sometimes we look at systems management issues and other needs and forget about that overriding public opinion, so it's very helpful for us to have that reinforced.

Mr Wood: I gather with respect to the correction of records, you think it would be a good idea to have some third party, by which I mean some-

Mr Henry: Yes, independent, if possible; like any political party or whatever, or health care provider.

Mr Wood: The kind of person, for example, who could be considered for that would be the Information and Privacy Commissioner.

Mr Henry: Yes.

Mr Wood: I don't know whether you want to answer this question or not, but I'm going to put you on the spot and you can decide whether or not you want to answer. We've heard from some groups that there are certain kinds of research, because of the small number of people who are affected by it, that you can't do in a practical way and get the consent of the people whose health records you're accessing. If we come to the conclusion that's right, and we haven't come to that conclusion yet, which side of that would you come down on? I'm going to put you right on the spot here and you can decide whether or not you want to answer it. If we got to the point where we saw there were certain kinds of research where we either had to allow access, under oversight and so on, or say, "No, you can't do that kind of research in Ontario," which side of that argument would you come down on, would you think?

Mr Henry: I would say I would be on the side of the research not being made available, or some deleted there, blacked out, so the person's name doesn't show or his health number. All the rest of the information could be used for research purposes. I don't see why they have to have the person's name or health number for research purposes.

Mr Wood: We don't have time for me to explain to you exactly how some of these people come to that conclusion, but if we got to the point of having to say, "Yes, we will allow some access without consent," or "No, you can't do that kind of research in Ontario," if we got to that very difficult point-

Mr Henry: I would say no to research in Ontario there, because research is going on in the United States with drug companies doing their own research and paying there, so I imagine they can go through alternative means than just grabbing somebody's record.

The Chair: Thank you again, Mr Henry. We appreciate your taking the time to come before us here today.

CANADIAN CIVIL LIBERTIES ASSOCIATION

The Chair: Our next presentation will be from the Canadian Civil Liberties Association. Good afternoon and welcome to the committee.

Mr Stephen McCammon: Thank you very much for the opportunity to appear before you today. Alan Borovoy sends his regrets. He would have been here himself but he was reluctant to attempt another rescheduling of our deputation, so he sent me in his stead. My name is Stephen McCammon. I'm associate counsel with the Canadian Civil Liberties Association.

CCLA welcomes Bill 159 on the basis that it generally advances the state of the law today in respect of privacy protection and privacy rights. To begin with, the bill strikes off in the right direction in light of two key features: first, it creates an almost uniform set of rules to safeguard some of the most personal and private information in the province; and secondly, it makes a fair start at providing for a single oversight mechanism to ensure that the bill's written rules are respected.

At the same time, CCLA urges you to consider several key amendments. These amendments fall into four areas: on disclosures; on patient access to records and the correction of those records; on the role of the Information and Privacy Commissioner; and on the application of the bill.

On disclosures, I'd like to turn your attention to section 12 of the bill, which codifies some important general principles designed to limit the possibility that personal health information will be collected, used or disclosed improperly. However, subsection 12(8) of the bill takes us all needlessly down a wrong turn. Section 12(8) says that the basic principles-for example, the principle that no more information should be disclosed than is reasonably necessary to meet the purpose-that kind of principle doesn't apply where the disclosure is directed under the act or required under some other act. It's very hard to understand, however, why such a basic, vital and flexible principle should ever not be a consideration in any decision about the wisdom of disclosing personal information. After all, why should any purpose warrant disclosing more information than is reasonably necessary to meet that purpose? It's a contradiction; it doesn't make any sense.

1200

The principles found in section 12, then, ought to apply across the board, including disclosures directed by the minister under section 31. Accordingly, our first recommendation is that you urge this bill be amended so that 12(8) is taken out.

In a number of provisions, Bill 159 spells out circumstances under which health information custodians may disclose personal information without a person's consent. It should be clear by now, however, that such non-consensual discretionary disclosures ought to be the exception and not the rule. Indeed, in the not-so-distant past, the Krever commission propounded a great deal of wisdom on this very subject and suggested a number of safeguards.

More specifically, the law-enforcement-related discretionary disclosures permitted by subsections 36(1)(g) and (h) are far too broad. Doctors and other health information custodians ought not to have their special relationship with patients, so dependent as it is on confidentiality and trust, undermined by the pressures that inevitably flow from such a wide discretion to disclose to police and other authorities. Indeed, as a general matter, such disclosure should only be permitted where an overriding interest trumps general duty not to disclose. The bill ought to be amended to reflect the principle that health information custodians should not disclose personal health information to the authorities unless there is a reasonable basis to believe there is a significant risk of injury or harm. I want to clarify that that's bodily injury we're talking about. Even then, personal information amiable to a warrant application should not be disclosed until after a warrant has been obtained. These are the general safeguards we have in law around the Criminal Code and there is no reason to diverge from them here in the province of Ontario. None of this is designed to frustrate policing. All of this is designed so as not to erode public confidence in health care and health privacy.

Similarly, the bill should be amended to limit the discretion granted health information custodians when it comes to disclosing the personal information of people detained in penal, custodial or psychiatric facilities, and to those institutions and the officials thereof. Section 33, therefore, should be amended to ensure that unless such a person is determined to be incompetent or dangerous, no disclosures should be made that are not otherwise consented to or provided for in law.

One more matter on disclosures: in the bill, in section 36, there are a number of other permissive disclosure regimes in relation to a number of statutes. I confess we're not up to speed on why social workers and various health regulatory professionals under section 36 need this disclosure room. We are mindful that managing the health care system involves some flexibility. What we propose is that if you go ahead with these permissive disclosures in section 36, then you amend the bill so that after one year the power to disclose under those sections lapses. You would have to re-enact it, and in the interim we would ask you to provide further information to the public about why such permissive disclosures are available and perhaps consider having the privacy commissioner conduct a review of those specific kinds of disclosures.

I'd like to now move on to discuss patient access to and correction of patient records. Most everyone would agree that, subject to specific and narrow exceptions, patients ought to have access to their own records and they ought to be able to dispute the accuracy of those records. While the bill acknowledges as much, there are three problems I'd like to draw to your attention.

First, section 44, specifically paragraphs (d) and (e) of the bill, allows government to limit access and correction rights by way of regulation. While future developments may mandate new exceptions to these or other important privacy rights, rights-limiting changes invariably ought to be creatures of legislative action, preceded by full and public debate. Leaving such matters to regulatory pronouncement means exposing all of us to unnecessary risks. While there is no way of ensuring that laws passed after a full debate will themselves be sound, there is even less reason to be confident that laws developed without such scrutiny would be wise or fair.

Every one of us has a finite amount of wisdom and, in any case, the fairest of governments are replaced, all of which is to say that any faith anyone has in a government of their own party is at best comforting themselves with cold comfort for the short run.

Last, if governments seek legitimacy in this kind of law-making, they must at a minimum engage those who will have to live with the law in a full and public debate. Accordingly, CCLA recommends that clauses 44(d) and (e) be struck from the bill. If there are other exemptions to consider, let them be set out specifically in the legislation.

I should note that this is a general concern that comes up from time to time in other provisions of the bill. We say again it's one thing to handle administrative matters by way of regulation, but rights-limiting provisions should be set out in legislation and not left to regulation. Time doesn't allow me to get into all the details, but I would ask to have particular attention in this regard given to section 76.

The second matter under access-to-information concerns: while it might be proper for a health information custodian to consider refusing a patient access to records collected or created under a properly authorized investigation, access should only be refused in fact where it is reasonably expected to interfere with such an investigation. As it stands now, section 48 appears to allow a refusal even in circumstances where an investigation is long over. Accordingly, subclause 48(1)(b)(i) should be amended so as to ensure that access will only be refused where it is reasonably expected to interfere with an ongoing investigation.

Third, while the bill rightly allows patients to dispute the accuracy of their own health records, the proposed remedy falls short of a cure. If a health information custodian attaches a statement of disagreement, it's game over. The record may indeed be wrong, the error may have serious consequences for the patient's peace of mind, well-being or livelihood, but the record stands. True, it stands beside a statement of disagreement, but you know as well as I that many of us trust experts over Citizen Jane or Joe. Of course sometimes the expert is right but by no means always. In any case, surely one of the main points of these sorts of dispute resolution mechanisms is to root out errors, especially gross errors.

As it stands, there's nothing in this bill that trumps a stubborn custodian's gross error; it just sits in someone's personal file looming over a statement of disagreement. Patients ought to be able to complain to the Information and Privacy Commissioner in such circumstances and the commissioner ought to be able to order a correction where the correction is warranted. Subsection 50(9) and clause 71(1)(b) ought to be amended accordingly.

I now turn to the role of the Information and Privacy Commissioner. The commissioner and the proposed assistant commissioner have a vital role to play in ensuring that rights that are written down on paper are actually respected across the province. Here too the bill heads off in the right direction. However, it needs at least three pushes to give it enough steam to ensure reasonable prospects of success.

First, the commissioner's role in reviewing disclosures directed by the minister is unduly fettered. Essentially, subsection 31(2) says that the minister must allow the commissioner to review plans to direct the disclosure of personal information ahead of time unless the information arises from a program or service that involves any public monies or administration. That would mean that any such disclosures in relation to the vast majority of health care would go ahead without any review at all. After all, the lion's share of health care is handled, or at least partially funded, by the public health care system, unless you've been tipped off about plans to privatize health care in Ontario from top to bottom. But in any case, we ask you to ensure that the bill is amended so that all directed disclosures are preceded by a thorough commission review.

Second, section 14 of the bill gives the commissioner too narrow a role in reviewing health information custodian plans to conduct computer matches of health information databases. Database matching is an enormously powerful tool and, as is usually the case, such a powerful tool brings with it a potential for tremendous benefits and terrible hardships. Accordingly, CCLA recommends that any plan to conduct computer matching first face review by the commissioner, who ought then to be able to publicize any concerns not resolved through the review process. Such a system will allow for much-needed scrutiny, without unduly fettering the good use of innovative technology.

1210

Thirdly, one of the key roles the bill properly assigns to the commissioner concerns patient complaints about improper information practices. Under section 68, a person injured by an inappropriate collection, use or disclosure, for example, can lodge a complaint with the commissioner. What can the commissioner do then? Unfortunately, in the aftermath of attempts at mediation, very little.

To begin with, the commissioner's power to investigate such complaints comes up short. In contrast to the investigatory powers provided to deal with access-to-records concerns, the commissioner has no power, for example, to demand the production of relevant documents. The simple answer is to ensure that when dealing with complaints, the commissioner is provided with investigatory powers similar to those granted to her in relation to access-to-records concerns, as set out in section 69.

At the same time, we note that the commissioner's complaint-related remedial powers are overly narrow. While the commissioner can comment and recommend freely, she can only order a custodian to cease improper collecting practices or order her to disclose improperly collected information. What happens, however, if the complaint shows that the information wasn't collected improperly; instead, it has been used or disclosed improperly? Destroying such records will likely stop the misuse or wrongful disclosure, but it might also result in the destruction of properly collected and otherwise vital information. Surely the commissioner should be granted remedial powers suited to the range of complaints she will evidently face. Such powers should include the power to order a custodian to cease improper collections, uses or disclosures, as well as the power to order the disposal, retrieval or redirection of relevant information.

The final area of our presentation today concerns the application of the law. Employers and insurance companies are conspicuously absent from the list of those defined as "health information custodians." Nonetheless, virtually every such operation is already and will continue to be in possession of a great deal of highly personal information in the absence of oversight. While we are pleased that as recipients of such information, the bill will bind them not to use or disclose personal health information for any extraneous purposes not otherwise consented to or provided for in law, we nonetheless urge the committee to amend the bill so as to ensure that employers and insurance companies in possession of personal health information are included in the definition of "health information custodians."

I'd be happy to reiterate our recommendations, but I imagine my time may be short. I'd be happy also to entertain questions.

The Chair: Thank you. There are about two minutes per caucus.

Ms Lankin: I appreciate your presentation; it's very helpful. There are a number of key areas that I think the committee would be interested in pursuing.

I have two specific questions. First, in a situation where a health information custodian may disclose information where they believe there's been a criminal offence and/or where there is a significant risk to another individual-there are a couple of aspects to that-we have had presentations before us that suggest that the test of significant risk which you propose is actually a weaker test than what currently exists in the Mental Health Act, where I believe the wording is "serious and imminent danger of bodily harm" or something; I don't have the exact words in my head. When you use the words "serious risk," were you proposing a legal test or were you just describing that we had to have some more protection than what was in the act?

Mr McCammon: I was certainly suggesting we have more protection than what we have in this bill. I think you're correct in identifying a principal concern about the unique circumstances faced by psychiatric patients. Extra protections might well be needed to ensure that the kinds of information they disclose are not cavalierly disclosed without their consent or the authorities'. I think that's fair to say.

Ms Lankin: You may want to put your mind to that issue of the different tests of significant risk or serious and imminent danger.

Mr McCammon: Unfortunately, I think the imminence has been taken out of much of the mental health regime.

Ms Lankin: Only in certain respects, not in others.

The second question: when you talked about the section that has permissive disclosures by exempting certain other pieces of legislation-the Regulated Health Professions Act or whatever-we've had much evidence about their role and the differences in their role. But I wondered if you would be comforted if the section 12 principle of only disclose as much as needed for that purpose was built in and applied to any of these exemptions or areas where we're deferring to provisions in other pieces of legislation.

Mr McCammon: I read the bill to mean that those general principles do apply to discretionary disclosures, including those under section 36. So that's a partial comfort, but not necessarily comfort enough. I think when you outline explicit discretions to disclose, even there you have to have a valid purpose in mind. I'm just not aware at this time whether or not the range of disclosures considered under section 36 in respect of those regulated areas rise to that level of purpose.

Mr Wood: I'd like to ask about something that pops up at a number of points in this bill where we have disclosure without consent. I think there's probably a significant body of opinion that that's necessary in some cases, for example, for a regulatory body of a profession. The issue that some have raised is, should a regulatory body of a profession, a college, have the right to access that information period, or should they have to go to a third party, ie, get a search warrant before they do it? In other words, where they're the enforcer, should they be able to decide themselves whether or not to access, or should they have to go to a third party?

Mr McCammon: I think in general the presumption is, if not consent, then a warrant-type regime; if not a warrant-type regime, then explicit and very narrow exemptions from the general principle of consent. Those statutory regimes themselves have to be justified in terms of some higher purpose that trumps the general principle of don't disclose without consent. I'm not sure I can answer the specifics of each-

Mr Wood: No, I'm asking generally.

Mr McCammon: Generally I would say again, if not consent, then have a third, independent party assess.

Mr Wood: I wonder if you'd share with us for the record why you say that.

Mr McCammon: Why I say that?

Mr Wood: Yes. What considerations have led you to that opinion? Why do you think that's important, in other words?

Mr McCammon: I think the main thread running throughout this is that health information and how it gets shared, why it's important that it is shared, all rests on this trust between people and their health care providers. They disclose a great deal of information that goes nowhere else, in their own minds. They want it only to go to their doctor. Often people disclose things to doctors that they wouldn't disclose to their friends or colleagues because they're looking for help with some problem that may in fact go to their well-being in life. That privacy concern, the dignity associated with it, the special nature of the relationship between a doctor and a patient, require some safeguards and require us not to put pressures on the doctors unduly to go beyond the confines of that professional relationship.

There are a wide range of perfectly valid possible exemptions. When should an exemption be one that isn't reviewed by a third, independent party? I say, only when the purpose of that exemption reaches a benchmark of significance to generally trump the principles of no consent and only no consent with a warrant regime.

Mr Wood: Why would it ever trump it?

Mr McCammon: Again, if a doctor, for example, learns from a patient and has reasons to believe that a patient is going to go out and do someone some terrible harm, that kind of harm might well trump the general principle of don't disclose without consent, but it's narrow, that exception to allow a permissive disclosure. For other circumstances, there's certainly good reason why authorities of all kinds want the information, but why not put them to the modest difficulty of having to justify it in order to safeguard the regime of health care and health care privacy, which is, after all, the thrust of this bill?

1220

Mrs McLeod: I appreciate the clarity of your presentation. I'm looking forward to having a written copy so that we can refer to it at numbers of points. We can obtain that through Hansard, if not otherwise.

I want to come back to the issue of the trumping of the rule of no disclosure. You had mentioned in your presentation that there's a general principle that there should be no disclosure unless risk of significant bodily harm to others. You also referenced safeguards in the criminal act. My first question is, in referencing the safeguards in the criminal act, are you referring specifically to law enforcement officers or more broadly, that that's the overriding principle that could be trump the no-disclosure rule?

Mr McCammon: If I understand your question, the principle of safeguarding no disclosure without consent certainly goes beyond merely to law enforcement officials. There are a whole variety of officials engaged in all sorts of different investigations, typically of a less pressing nature than the criminal law authorities. So certainly the same principle would apply to the lesser-

Mrs McLeod: So for others, that principle could trump the no-disclosure rule. With law enforcement officers, are you suggesting that should be a direction in legislation that governs even the granting of a warrant, that you should not even be able to subpoena health care records?

Mr McCammon: No. The warrant regime provides for a hearing in which the interests of privacy and the interests of law enforcement can be weighed and adjudicated by an independent judge.

Mrs McLeod: I ask the question for two reasons and I am focusing on the warrant issue for two reasons. One is because we heard earlier this morning in a televised submission that there is a concern about sensitive health records becoming part of court records, particularly in the sense now that they can appear on the Internet and can be readily accessed. That's the first concern.

The second concern is that we periodically hear about warrants that have been obtained to access health records in situations which seem to us a little hard to explain, and we wonder what governs a justice of the peace, for example, in giving a police officer a warrant that allows him to obtain sensitive health records.

Mr McCammon: I'm not prepared to take apart the whole warrant regime today. I am sure there are examples where warrants are unjustifiably granted, but there is a court system designed to check that from time to time. We can't design a perfect system today. We're not going to say, "No warrant applications for health care records." We just want to make sure that where consent is not going to be respected, there is an independent third party to adjudicate on the wisdom of disclosing this sensitive information for this particular purpose.

Mrs McLeod: And you don't think-

The Chair: Sorry, we're well over our time. Thank you very much for appearing before us here today. We appreciate your presentation.

TORONTO ASSOCIATION FOR COMMUNITY LIVING
ONTARIO ASSOCIATION FOR COMMUNITY LIVING
ONTARIO AGENCIES SUPPORTING INDIVIDUALS WITH SPECIAL NEEDS

The Chair: Our next presentation will be from the Toronto Association for Community Living. Good afternoon and welcome to the committee.

Mr Gordon Kyle: Hello. I'm going to begin. My name is Gordon Kyle. I'm a policy analyst with the Ontario Association for Community Living. Also presenting with me today will be Bill Barber, whom I will let introduce himself more thoroughly in a moment.

I would like to thank you for giving us this opportunity to present on this important issue. We are actually here today representing three organizations: the Toronto Association for Community Living, Ontario Agencies Supporting Individuals with Special Needs, and the Ontario Association for Community Living. Collectively, our organizations represent more than 150 organizations across Ontario supporting people with intellectual disabilities.

Our organizations are committed to the creation of a society where all citizens are welcomed and have an opportunity to participate in all aspects of community life, including school, work, housing and leisure activities, a society where people are supported to carry out roles and responsibilities as citizens. For more than 50 years we have worked within communities, providing a wide range of supports and services to individuals with intellectual disabilities.

The description of our organizations and mission is provided here not just for background. In fact, it's important to understand who we are, to understand our feelings about Bill 159. The services we provide are funded primarily through the Ministry of Community and Social Services via the Developmental Services Act and the Homes for Retarded Persons Act, both of which are covered by Bill 159 as it is currently drafted. It is our position that the inclusion of services delivered under these two acts in the requirements of Bill 159 is inappropriate, essentially spreading the net too far with this legislation, and should be changed to exclude these two acts.

The programs and services delivered through the Developmental Services Act and the Homes for Retarded Persons Act are not health services by any means. The services provided through these acts are designed to provide key supports to individuals to allow them to participate in the mainstream of society. As this relates to health care, services provided under these two acts are designed to link individuals to appropriate health care providers in the community, but clearly our services do not provide any health care services.

In fact, people with disabilities in Ontario have worked hard throughout the history of our organizations to avoid being seen as aligned with health care services. People with disabilities desire to be seen as regular citizens and, like other citizens, and sometimes to a greater degree than other citizens, require certain accommodations and supports to participate effectively in their communities. The need for such accommodations and supports does not mean that people are ill; this is a stigmatization that we have fought hard to avoid. We have insisted that funding for our services be tied appropriately to the Ministry of Community and Social Services, which has a mandate to build supportive communities. We are clear that the support services that people with intellectual disabilities require to participate in their communities should not be delivered through Ministry of Health funding and should not be seen as services that are required to help people overcome their "affliction," their disability.

This has been one of the key elements of our philosophy and approach throughout our history and we ask that Bill 159 be changed to respect this and to exclude the Developmental Services Act and the Homes for Retarded Persons Act from the legislation.

We would like to take a few moments to talk to you about some of the implications of the legislation if it were to be applied to the services that are delivered through these two acts.

I'm going to ask Bill to make a few comments on that.

Mr Bill Barber: My name is Bill Barber.

I appreciate the opportunity to speak to you today on the legislation. I am a volunteer board member of OASIS, an umbrella association that represents 75 agencies across Ontario providing services and supports to people with developmental disabilities and their families. I am also a volunteer board member of the Toronto Association for Community Living, which is one of the OASIS and OACL agencies which provides these services and supports in Toronto.

Most important, I am the parent of a child with a developmental disability, Nancy, who is now 25 years old. I am profoundly interested in her support, her care and her privacy.

The community living movement was begun more than 50 years ago by parents of so-called retarded children at that time. They had found that there were no services in the community for their children. The only option presented was to institutionalize their children, and they were advised to pretend they never existed. This was not a path they were prepared to accept, and so services and supports such as the Toronto Association for Community Living began.

The province of Ontario made a decision to provide these services and supports in the community for individuals with a developmental disability through transfer payment agencies that have a volunteer board of directors. It entered legal agreements with respect to the quality and quantity of service being purchased. The sophistication of these organizations varies greatly from organizations that would operate a single program at one location to organizations, like the Toronto association, that operate a multitude of services at numerous locations. Virtually none of these services have medical professionals on staff.

As stated in the opening remarks, we do not see ourselves as a group that should be covered by the legislation. We do not generate medical information. We do not provide a diagnosis and we do not recommend treatment. We provide supports that allow the individual to live, work and enjoy leisure time in his or her community. The only medical files we have would be second or third generation and used solely to assist staff in ensuring the person lives in a safe manner in his or her community.

All files pertaining to an individual being supported are kept confidential in a safe location. The majority of the organizations represented by OACL and OASIS would have medical information as a hard copy in the person's file. This information would have been obtained with consent, either from the individual, the parent or guardian, or the substitute decision-maker for the individual. This information could be kept in a program location or a central location, depending on the size and sophistication of the organization providing the service. In most cases, only a summary or the medical direction would be noted in a computer file. As stated before, most information would be provided as hard copy and attached to a master file.

1230

We're suggesting that the hardships placed on voluntary organizations, which do not have the means of generating more revenue except by contract changes with the Ministry of Community and Social Services, are unacceptable. Our experience has been that when other ministries or organizations have legislated or levied second-party increases-such as workplace hazardous materials information systems, pay equity, liability insurance increases, fuel rate increases-these increases haven't been recognized by the funder. This leaves the transfer payment agency in a position of having to cut services, deny services or pay their staff at a level that ensures an exceptionally high turnover rate for staff.

I'd like to tell you some of the practical effects this legislation would have on services for people with developmental disabilities at a large association like the Toronto association.

First, computers and databases: during last year's Y2K crisis, the Toronto association had to embark on the expensive task of replacing its non-compliant computer system. We elected to develop software that allows our services to share information and allows inputting to be done at a person's home, to ensure that staff working with an individual have the information necessary to provide the most appropriate support, and to do this as efficiently as possible.

While the Toronto association did receive some additional funding, the cost of this change was primarily covered by the Toronto association. While this did not compromise direct service, it was only accomplished by holding vacancies of management staff and stretching everyone to take on additional extra duties.

In the proposed legislation section 13 states that the Toronto association would have to comply with whatever electronic transfer requirements are prescribed in the regulations. It will be some time before the regulations are ready for review, but how can we be certain that they will not impose demands that cannot be accommodated by our new system? After all the efforts to create a system that really works for the individuals and families we support, what new parameters will it be forced to meet? More important, will it require increasingly scarce resources to be reallocated to meeting the needs of the computer system and consequently away from the primary goal of providing quality support services to people with developmental disabilities?

The second practical issue is one of fundraising. It's one of the critical issues facing agencies like the Toronto association. It's the need to raise funds and be less dependent on the taxpayers of Ontario. Fundraising has become a very important component of the agency, and direct mail campaigns are an important part of revenue generation. The proposed legislation requires that agencies provide written notice that their information will be used or disclosed for fundraising purposes at the time it is collected.

The problem is that this clause prevents us from calling family members to ask for a donation if we did not inform them in writing that their information will be used or disclosed for fundraising purposes. It should be pointed out that family information is routinely gathered at the first point of contact, and this is a particularly sensitive time in developing a relationship between the intake worker and the person and their family. We would also have to ensure that the database can reflect who has consented and who has not.

That brings us to the third issue, which is consent. Consent is an issue of some concern in the field of developmental disabilities. It's always difficult to determine who has the capability or the capacity to provide consent. We deal with concrete tasks around medical care, and in that case people with developmental disabilities can often provide consent. When we deal in abstracts, such as, "understand the subject matter ... and to appreciate the reasonably foreseeable consequences," which is section 54, it becomes increasingly difficult for many individuals with a developmental disability to provide informed consent. The legislation does recognize the variable nature of this in that the ability to provide consent may vary with respect to specific pieces of information and to the changing time of consent.

On a practical level, since we hold many pieces of health-related information on behalf of the individual, we will need to itemize who gave or withheld consent on each, and if the consent is time-sensitive due to the person's changing capacity and/or capability. This would be a huge task.

These are just three areas where the Toronto association will experience difficulty in implementing the proposed legislation. I am certain that similar associations and agencies will have substantially the same problems.

In summary, we do not support the concept that disability equals an illness. We think that a supportive community makes the best safeguard a person can have. I said before that my daughter needs privacy and respect, but she needs it as a regular citizen does, not because she will need services of associations like the Toronto Association for Community Living.

What is most distressing is that effort, energy and resources will be expended to comply with legislation that will not substantially improve the quality of life for people with developmental disabilities and will drain away much-needed funds from services which we so clearly and desperately need.

I therefore ask, together with the umbrella organizations-the Ontario Association for Community Living and the Ontario associations supporting individual services-that you exempt agencies supporting people with developmental disabilities from this legislation. Thank you.

The Chair: That affords us just about a minute and half per caucus for questioning, and this time we'll commence with Mr Wood.

Mr Wood: I got the impression from your presentation that you didn't have a fundamental objection to the bill but were concerned that you would not have resources with which to be able to implement it in the work that you do. Was I correctly picking up on that?

Mr Kyle: We haven't taken the time to do the analysis of what we would like to see changed, to put those comments forward on what we would like to see changed. Fundamentally, we would like to ensure that there's protection within the health services in the province and would encourage any work that can be done to ensure that.

Mr Barber: We're just not a medical service agency and, therefore, if we did have to put it into effect, we would think, do we have to hire doctors and nurses to ensure that the information is correct or are we going to need computer systems? It's beyond most small agencies-even large agencies-to implement.

Mr Wood: I got the impression that at the moment you don't have much of a handle on the cost to you if you did come within this regime.

Mr Kyle: Only that it would be more than we've got available in reserve. The point is that other developments within our sector and additional costs have been just crushing the organizations in recent years and we see this as another one that will be piled on. We really don't see the benefit of connecting these requirements to our services. Essentially, the safeguards that this is trying to ensure will be ensured through the medical systems that people are connected to. We don't provide those services, so it would be a duplication of the protection to connect them within our sector.

Mrs McLeod: I certainly hear your concerns about cost implications. I can assure you, if government were to require health care providers to put all of their records on to an electronic base, they would hear from a lot of people about very significant cost implications.

I did want to ask you about the basic concern you have with inclusion, because you're not the providers of health care. You serve a very different role with your community. You are, nevertheless, holders of individual health records, are you not, or is that in fact not true?

Mr Barber: The staff would have information like they don't eat lima beans or they're allergic to tomatoes, just day-to-day information that a parent would have for their own children, that they would know, and if a babysitter came in, they could say, "Don't let them eat this and be careful of that." It's not real, hard medical information.

Mr Kyle: In no case that I'm aware of do we have the transfer of medical records from a physician to our services, for instance. It would be notes for proper care of people that we keep on record-some of those health-related, obviously-to make sure that people are getting the care and support they need.

Mrs McLeod: So you would consider yourself a recipient, as defined under this legislation, rather than the custodian of health information.

Mr Barber: Yes.

Mrs McLeod: Are there protocols within the two acts you are governed by that would deal with the protection of individual sensitive information?

Mr Kyle: Yes, there are some. If there is any concern that there are inadequate protections, I think they can be dealt with through MCSS rather than through this legislation through the Ministry of Health. But there are currently some protections within MCSS.

1240

Ms Lankin: I appreciate your comment that disability is not equal to illness and your request to be exempted from the legislation. If I can, I want to suggest that I don't think the ministry ever intended to suggest that. Including your organization under "health information custodian" is because the bill is actually set up to define where health information may be stored and then how you collect it, disclose it, have access to it.

I'm going to ask you to turn that on its head because I think where we should be ending up is with legislation that says health information is private and should be protected, and there should be rules that apply to it wherever it is stored, not because it's in a health facility-whether it's in an employer's files or whether it's in an insurance company. That may be broader than others are prepared to go, but the concept being this is about health information and how it is protected.

That being the case, I am aware, for example-and you may have heard this-of the incident where the organization had a labour dispute on and something was happening. The executive director took the files and tossed them out on the lawn and there was private information in there. It was occasioned by a labour dispute. However, the result of it was lack of appropriate care and attention to clients' personal files, within which are some aspects of personal health information. We would all say that's not appropriate. But there's not clear law that governs it in some of the organizations, for example, that you represent.

Could you undertake to go back and discuss with the staff in the various residences what kind of health information-examples, not detailed charts-may be contained in a client's personal file that is kept on-site? That might help us look at to what degree should any of these protections apply to the business that you're doing in providing daily supports to individuals. I'd just ask if you could do that.

Mr Kyle: That's a fair request. We could do that, yes.

Mr Barber: I can say that we do have very strict policies concerning confidentiality.

Ms Lankin: But there's no consequence that an individual has other than the goodwill of the organization, and there is tremendous goodwill in your organization. But when it's subject to small-c corporate policies set by boards, that's subject to change. When it's set in law, it's a right that's guaranteed to the individual. The whole premise here is about health information privacy being the right of the individual.

Mr Barber: I think we're required by the Ministry of Community and Social Services to have such policies on confidentiality.

Mr Kyle: As I said earlier, I think in order for us to have continuity of that, it seems appropriate to me that those safeguards be extended from the existing policies within MCSS. If they're-

Ms Lankin: On that point-

The Chair: I'm sorry, Ms Lankin; you're well over your time. Thank you both, gentlemen, for coming before us here today to make your presentation.

DAVID PRICHARD

The Chair: Our next presentation will be from Mr David Prichard.

Mr David Prichard: Good afternoon, Mr Chair and members of committee.

The Chair: Good afternoon. Welcome to the committee.

Mr Prichard: I appear before you as a citizen. I have no particular qualifications in law or medicine and I won't pretend to interpret on that. I do, however, have grave concerns. You will probably hear me make reference to certain addiction programs. I have over 20 years in a particularly well-known organization. I think the fact that I once drank at Molly `n' Me, and the bikers were afraid of me, may testify to how successful those programs are. Having said that, I neither represent nor speak for any of these organizations.

It is to be noted that for the purposes of this proposed act exceptions cover individuals like aboriginal healers, those with a religious mandate, while not touching on a variety of self-help organizations such as Alcoholics Anonymous, Narcotics Anonymous, support groups for cancer and other ailments. That the addiction research centre in Toronto has discontinued its outpatient program due to the fact that such organizations have a better rate of recovery is an indication that they do have a medical, therapeutic effect, though it is not the intent of such organizations, nor it is that they would they consider themselves to be medical practitioners of any description.

However, whether it be for the purpose of lifting the scourge of substance abuse or for the relief from some other ailment, such organizations succeed by members freely exchanging information about their own conditions, what they do to cope with and alleviate their conditions. Were a fee involved with such organizations, members would fall under the purposes of this act, as information of a medical nature is often exchanged in such venues: one sufferer might identify with the experiences of another. Yet should a member of one of these organizations elect to set himself or herself up as a lay therapist and charge a fee, they are considered a practitioner or health information custodian.

This bill does not seem to address the fact that many lay therapists comprise a broad gamut of services in our society. It would appear that simply accepting a fee, under the definition of this bill, infers professionalism. The fact of the matter is that pet care providers in our society face more stringent regulation than lay therapists. While some practitioners have banded together to provide professional associations, and the government currently explores the field of naturopathy, it remains that there are no statutory regulations, no standards in training or education, or avenues of redress against such practitioners save the courts. Nowhere is this more particularly evident than in the field of the mental health lay therapist.

With a great many individuals turning to alternative therapies, such roles and services are currently being studied by both the conventional medical profession and Legislatures for inclusion into the broad spectrum of treatments. Central to the debate is that many therapies offered are untested and unproven. It is of grave concern that this bill might lend to unqualified and untrained individuals a professionalism both before the public and the law that is neither earned nor warranted.

The relationship between patient and physician is by and large sacrosanct. We have seen in the past arguments regarding the intrusion of medical funders, either public or private, into that relationship. It has also been legislated that physicians are required to notify authorities should they believe their patient presents an immediate threat to another individual. Yet this bill does not seem to address the fact that both the medical practitioner and the patient may present a threat to another individual. Many self-help groups have an axiom that a person's habit affects 20 to 25 other people-spouse, offspring, employer etc.

We have seen in recent years, particularly in the alternative community, treatments whose longevity and objectiveness seem to have more in common with the fashion industry than the medical. It seems that every other day one can pick up a newspaper to learn that last year's research fact is now a blunder.

With established medical treatments, there is some recourse through self-regulating bodies and articles of law. With alternative practices, one can only fall back to the law. Within such practices there ranges everything from peer-reviewed experimentation to what amounts to little more than medical fads. The issue is, at what point privacy and privilege? Do we grant to the unregulated, and perhaps even untrained, therapist that accorded to the physician who has years of training?

In any person's life there are a host of people who might be concerned or affected by their welfare: a parent of an adult child, a partner, an employer or a friend. It may be argued that they need access to medical records or to be able to alert a competently trained third party to review such records. Much about the practice of medicine is subjective. This is particularly true of those who practise in the various disciplines of mental health. The question that needs to be asked is, will this statute hamper the inquiries of a third party who has reason to question a course of treatment?

Also to be considered is the third party who is affected by the ailment of another. An excellent example of this might be the experience in New Zealand regarding the now-discredited repressed memory syndrome. In a decade, approximately 80,000 cases were discovered, largely through the lay therapy community. The vast majority of sexual abuse charges either didn't get as far as the courts or were dismissed. When the government of New Zealand ceased awarding compensation to alleged victims, the caseload for this syndrome all but vanished. What of those falsely accused by this fad? Would this bill endanger their defence? In seeking to preserve the patient-provider relationship as one of trust, does it do so at the expense of another party's wealth, health or liberty?

Simply accepting a fee for a service does not make one a health care provider, as the bill seems to do inadvertently. At worst, it would appear to give licence to quackery. A question facing this committee is, should this bill offer the protection of law to the unregulated?

1250

The issue of third parties needs to be addressed more thoroughly. Whatever agency, be it the police, a concerned relative, or an another individual affected by another's ailment, should not have unwarranted access to the provider-patient relationship. Neither should such information remain untouchable. We currently have in place a system for dispute resolution called the courts.

This legislation needs to reflect that those who have just reason, as determined by the courts, may seek access to such information as required for their legitimate purpose. Without such safeguards we are not protecting the medical relationship in society, we are isolating it.

Daily we hear of some new medical advance, a stride that has portent for our well-being. The law should not inhibit such change, but it may well be it hampers, either to institution or individual, the ability to question or examine the practice of health care and the changes which are thrust upon us, many of which are untested.

As members of this committee will be aware, there are ongoing debate and rulings at the level of the Supreme Court of Canada as to the nature of what may be admitted as evidence and the extent to which a patient's medical records may be accessed. At the other end of the spectrum we have a very fluid media in which diagnosis by Oprah and prognosis by Roseanne seem to permeate the public mind.

Unproven and untested therapies are presented to the public as solutions to their ailments. While they may be abhorrent to the medical profession, they can be used by both the unscrupulous and the sincere as treatment-treatment which history shows us may bear more harm than good.

It is of the utmost importance that any measure drafted by this Legislature not conflict with federal legislation and be fluid enough to reflect changes to legislation at that level. Nor should it be written in such a way as to be seen to offer a cloak to the quack. Simply accepting a fee is not the practice of medicine.

If I may just for a moment, I do have a particular reason for wishing to address this. The matter is before the courts. I don't want to seem secretive but I trust you appreciate I have to be somewhat circumspect.

About 15 years ago, I dated a woman who was a lay therapist. We split apart for a number of reasons. One basically was that you couldn't say good morning without there having to be some sort of psychological reason, and I didn't find that particularly healthy myself. That she took up with an active manic-depressive as her next partner sort of testified to my belief that she was looking for a live-in patient, not a live-in partner.

Just by coincidence, 15 years later I rented one of my apartments to a woman. We got on famously. Her sons and I got on. It got to the point that I saw her come home from school with the boys and she looked absolutely beat. I told the boys, "Come down for breakfast tomorrow. Let your mother sleep in," and that started several months of their coming down and basically I was doing dinner. I enjoyed it thoroughly. During the course of one meal it was discovered that I had thrown over her lay therapist. The day after that this family never came to eat in my place again. You can't tell there was not some influence by the lay therapist. I was astonished to learn several months later from a mutual acquaintance that my tenant had told him that I had a history of being a stalker. I have no history of being a stalker. It came from the therapist, as far as I'm concerned.

The point I am trying to make here is that this woman is completely unregulated, she's completely untrained and-this is my own personal opinion-she's not particularly healthy. I have, in my case that is ongoing now, no recourse. There is no public body. She belongs to no institution. There is no way of going after her except through the courts. This woman, my tenant, was most horribly treated by her ex, the most severe domestic abuse I have ever seen without a fist actually being raised, so much so that-and I found myself in that uncomfortable position of, how far can you go in to intervene in another person's life? He drove her into the Clarke, and he told several of us that he intended to drive her into the Clarke. She was there for almost five months on a suicide watch. I don't believe this therapist is particularly good for this woman, but it's beyond my control. She has since moved out. She has a life of her own. But as I say, there came a legal matter between us, which is ongoing in the courts. I have no recourse to go after this woman. Even while this woman was under her treatment and we were on good terms, there was no third party to which I could say, "Hey, I think something's amiss here; this woman is not getting treatment."

I think the regulation of lay therapists, be they mental or naturopaths or whatever, is something that may not be within the jurisdiction of this committee, but I think it is something that the government needs to examine very carefully. I believe what is in the jurisdiction of this committee is that those who are not qualified, those who do not have any sanctions or training, those who might be just-

Friends of mine who are medical professionals tell me they get bulletins from things like Redbook and Good Housekeeping, when they're having articles on health, to alert the doctors that they're going to have a lot of patients coming in and discussing these issues. Somebody reads in Redbook that they might have this, and they're in to their doctor's two weeks later. That's the effect. I'm trying to put it in a flavour that the media-we've seen Oprah's book-of-the-month club. I've never enjoyed any of her choices, but that's another story. But then do we give credit to her medical theories as well? I'm using that as an example-I don't mean to slight her-of just how invasive and how trendy certain things have become in our society in regard to medical treatment. I have great fear, and this bill to me reads, that simply accepting a fee makes somebody a medical practitioner. It could very easily serve to cover the quack, and I would like to see that avoided.

The Chair: Thank you very much, Mr Prichard. We appreciate you bringing that perspective before the committee here today.

ONTARIO HIV TREATMENT NETWORK

The Chair: Our final presentation today will be from the Ontario HIV Treatment Network. Good afternoon and welcome to the committee.

Ms Patricia Balogh: Thank you, Chairman Gilchrist and members of the committee. I am Patricia Balogh, the executive director of the Ontario HIV Treatment Network. I'm joined this afternoon by the co-chair of our board of directors, Mr Derek Thaczuk, and by one of our consultants, Mr Ed McDonnell.

It's a privilege to address the standing committee on general government this afternoon on behalf of the Ontario HIV Treatment Network. To begin with, I wish to state that the OHTN compliments the government for introducing the legislation, which has been so much needed in Ontario since Justice Krever's report of the royal commission on confidentiality of health information back in 1980.

It's apparent that the protection of confidentiality and privacy of patient information has been largely based on ethical principles and professional codes of conduct for the last 100 years or so. In this day and age, this approach no longer provides an acceptable standard for the public, for health care providers, researchers and other stakeholder groups throughout Ontario.

Regretfully, repeated attempts to address this issue by successive governments over the last 20 years have been to no avail. Given advances in medical care and treatment, notably in the field of HIV-AIDS, the complexity of the current health care delivery system and progressive developments in the electronic transfer of health information, there certainly, from our perspective, is an urgent need for legislation which protects individuals and the public at large.

In deference to those of you who may not be familiar with the Ontario HIV Treatment Network, I wish to provide a brief overview of our agency. The OHTN is a non-profit corporation funded by the Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care. Our board of directors was mandated by your government to pursue three initiatives in order to promote timely and state-of-the-art health care for people living with HIV-AIDS in Ontario. These three programs include our investigator-driven research program, which supports innovative, Ontario-based HIV research in the areas of basic clinical, epidemiological and socio-behavioural science. Since our inception, our board of directors has committed over $12.4 million to support such research in the province. In addition, we have endowed an HIV chair at the University of Toronto.

1300

Our second program, the priority initiatives program, distributes funding to support time-limited initiatives which address priorities identified by our stakeholders, again to enhance care and treatment for people living with HIV.

The reason that brings us in front of you today is our third program, the HIV information infrastructure program, which I shall subsequently be referring to as HIIP. This is an innovative program which uses information technology to improve care and treatment and to increase the security and enhance the management of personal health information. This program consists of three parts: a clinical management system, which is an electronic health record equipped with decision-making tools to assist the physicians in delivering improved care; a central research database, which is a voluntary and anonymous database that will be used by researchers to answer important questions about HIV in Ontario; and finally, a secure communications network that links health care providers and other institutions with one another to ensure more efficient and secure communications between and among HIV care providers.

The OHTN is extremely proud that our HIIP project has been endorsed by the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care's smart systems for health as one of their own priority initiatives. Earlier this week it was gratifying to attend the Honourable Minister Clement's inaugural address at the ITAC Ontario health care conference, where he conveyed the government's commitment to supporting projects such as ours.

Now I turn to the draft legislation which brings us together today. My comments, and our written document, which has been submitted to assist you in your deliberations, reflect the wisdom gained by the OHTN as it has developed and implemented HIIP. In addition, our comments are intended to convey our desire to participate in your ongoing efforts to design and pass legislation which effectively addresses the complexity of this issue.

The OHTN brings a unique perspective to this debate, reflecting the diverse composition of our board and other governance structures, and our mandate to enhance the participation and collaboration of those with relevant experience and expertise. I refer to people living with HIV, their health care providers, researchers and others involved; all of these groups helping to make Ontario a leader, both nationally and internationally, in HIV care, treatment and research.

I wish you to note that we generally support the essence of the submissions which you have received from the Privacy Commissioner of Canada, the Information and Privacy Commissioner of Ontario earlier this morning, the HIV and AIDS Legal Clinic (Ontario) and the Ontario Medical Association. I will not repeat the concerns about Bill 159 expressed in those particular submissions but urge the committee to require amendments to the legislation that respond to the criticisms outlined by these notable individuals and organizations.

It appears that Bill 159 may intend to exclude anonymous research databases, including the HIIP clinical research database, from its provisions. However, given the definition of health information custodian as outlined in subsection 2(1), paragraph 13, the true reality appears ambiguous. Neither the OHTN nor the public has any way of knowing at this important juncture whether our CRD will be subject to Bill 159 or not. Furthermore, it appears there will be no opportunity for effective public scrutiny by our stakeholders of a unilateral decision by the government after Bill 159 has passed not to prescribe the OHTN as subject to the regulations.

The OHTN acknowledges that the electronic sharing of personal health information raises major privacy issues. For this reason, we have dedicated three years during the development of HIIP to judicious consideration of these issues. With the active participation of all of our stakeholders, including our colleagues at the AIDS Bureau in the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care, we have developed policies which include-and there are so many of them at this point, I'll just mention two particularly relevant here-consent and dispute resolution. We have developed, I would say, state-of-the-art policies and procedures for those involved in our CMS and our CRD in both of these areas.

Aside from the policy aspects, in addition, we are employing state-of-the-art technological functions, including public key infrastructure, pseudonymization and encryption to ensure maximum protection of the data voluntarily, which is being entrusted to us by people living with HIV. Given the advanced stage of our HIIP project, we contend that section 13 should be amended to specify the requirements to be met by health information custodians, rather than deferring these to be prescribed in the future by regulation.

We have serious concerns that the bill includes excessive ability to deviate from the established roles by virtue of regulations. Throughout the legislation, significant issues are deferred to be addressed at a later date in the regulations, leaving too much decision-making in a non-public forum.

I also wish to note that the use and disclosure of personal health information as described in sections 27, 29, 30, 31, 33 and 36 is of grave concern to the OHTN. Certainly, as a health care consumer myself and a professional social worker who has worked for 30 years in this province in a variety of clinical, administrative and policy positions, I must say I am truly dismayed. The breadth of Bill 159 in permitting the use and disclosure of personal health information without consent is not acceptable.

To illustrate our concerns, let me explain. The CRD component of HIIP is the continuation and expansion of an earlier database, the HIV Ontario Observational Database-HOOD, as some of you may be familiar with it. It gained full political support from the Minister of Health from its inception back in 1992. Due to the sensitivity about a person's HIV status, the high level of voluntary participation which was achieved through the forerunner of HIIP was achieved for one, and only one, reason: complete security of the contents from disclosure for any purpose other than research. That was agreed to at the time by everyone concerned, including the Minister of Health of the day.

The board of directors of the OHTN and all stakeholders associated with us retain a strong ethical and moral commitment to this tenet. To destroy client confidence in this fundamental premise, which Bill 159 has the potential to do, will deprive Ontario of one of the most robust HIV databases which exists in this country, one which your government is funding us to enhance, a fact for which we are extremely grateful.

As others have told you, legislation which threatens the physician-patient relationship will not only diminish the quality of health care but, in our opinion, also prevent Ontario from continuing to position itself as a world-class leader in HIV research.

1310

The OHTN strongly supports the principle that collection, use and disclosure of personal health information related to research must be subject to approval of a properly constituted research ethics board. In the absence of any legislated requirements to do so, we have already sought approval for our CRD from the University of Toronto, as did our forerunner, HOOD, back in the early 1990s. In addition, our director of science requires university REB approval to act as principal investigator for our CRD due to his own academic affiliation with the university.

Section 32 requires REB approval from some other institution without any obvious benefit for a duplicate review. In our opinion, Bill 159 must be amended to authorize REBs established by Ontario universities to approve projects for the purposes of this legislation.

The broad access of information about HIV status of individuals provided by section 31 in our opinion is completely at odds with clear restrictions imposed upon the disclosure of such information by Ontario's current public health legislation, the Health Protection and Promotion Act. The OHTN submits that the provisions of the HPPA reflect a much better understanding of the serious policy implications to individuals and to public health of a legal framework such as Bill 159, which fails in fact to protect this information.

In summary, I submit that Bill 159 is flawed. However, the importance of passing judicious personal health care legislation to protect the public, including people living with HIV, health care providers and researchers, cannot be denied. I commend the government for its commitment to this endeavour.

In closing, it is essential to reflect upon the fundamental importance of protecting the privacy of personal health information to ensure the Ontario HIV Treatment Network's ability to fulfill its objectives: to foster excellence in the delivery of health care to people living with HIV in Ontario and to the research related to those folks. The ability of people living with HIV to speak frankly and openly with their health care providers, and the confidence that they can do so without fear of state and other intrusions upon the integrity of that relationship, are the cornerstones of our efforts at the OHTN. Without these, the OHTN and many other organizations and service providers in Ontario will undoubtedly be compromised and potentially fail in their undertakings.

Thank you for your attention. Mr Chairman, I wish you and the committee members well in your deliberations.

The Chair: We have about two minutes left. The next party up in rotation is the NDP.

Ms Lankin: In your conclusion you set out a number of principles around the protection of information in databases. Without going through it, I want to suggest to you that in various parts of the legislation it attempts to provide those exact protections. But you're right in identifying all of the regulation-making power and the directed disclosures as pulling the rug out from under that if at some time in the future some government chose to do that. We've heard that clearly with respect to a number of aspects of the legislation. We're going to have to turn our minds to that.

You also indicated that you supported presentations by a number of previous groups, including the OMA. The OMA very clearly said they don't support lockbox provisions which allow people to have that final control over their information, and they're opposed to standardization attempts for charting.

Some of what you and your predecessor organizations have been able to accomplish in standardization of treatment guidelines and protocols, all of that, has been so incredibly important that there is standardization and the ability to transmit standardized information there. If we take a look at primary care reform or particularly at disease management, those principles for that sharing of information are important not to compromise individual control. My question to you is, in terms of health practitioner control, should the health practitioner be able to stand in the way or should all that control just rest with the patient? So do you support a lockbox and do you support standardization of charting if consent is given to transmit standardized information?

Ms Balogh: The authority and responsibility should be vested in the patient. That's the fundamental position of the OHTN. In terms of the lockbox, Ed, did you want to make any comment?

Mr Ed McDonnell: I think one of the things that we've grappled with is striking that balance between health care providers needing to have information-other presenters made that point earlier today-and maintaining control of the individual's own personal health information. I think the lockbox itself would be one of the things we rejected in the model of the electronic medical records that we developed at the OHTN through HIIP. I think it's due to the fact that we want the health care provider and the patient to have to come to accommodations about what information is shared and how that's done. So we've provided a flexible model through the technology, but I don't think we've come to a conclusion in terms of where to strike the balance on a lockbox.

The Chair: Thank you all for appearing before us today. We appreciate your presentation.

Committee members, I want to thank you all for your participation in the quite a few days that we've applied ourselves to this task. Notwithstanding the fact that we are not empowered to sit again as a committee until the House reconvenes, we have of course discussed the opportunities to meet to review the presentations that have been made, the synopsis that the research officer will be providing and whatever other thoughts folks like Ms Cavoukian and the ministry would like to provide. So on the understanding that those opportunities can and will take place, I just wanted to thank everyone.

Mrs Pupatello: Just before we leave-hopefully, we'll go into subcommittee work-could I ask research one additional question? It was concerning to me, the number of deputations that came before this committee that didn't seem necessarily to fit just into the discussion of privacy. Those were the alternative therapy discussions that have come forward in a number of presentations. I wonder if I could ask the research officer to provide us with a list of where within government, within which appropriate ministry division, we could have that discussion. It seems as though these particular groups have come forward to try to fit this discussion about appropriateness of therapies and their acceptance into the privacy discussion. My first response has been each time that there has got to be a different place that that discussion can be had, and I'm not certain what it is. Could the researcher provide us with that?

The Chair: Thank you. Are there any other questions for the researcher before we rise? Again, thank you, everyone. Officially, we will stand adjourned until the House reconvenes.

The committee adjourned at 1319.