The Philippine Star

Schools urged to ensure privacy in drug testing

- By JANVIC MATEO

The National Privacy Commission (NPC) has urged schools and agencies to strengthen their systems security and ensure the confidenti­ality of data when implementi­ng the drug testing policy.

“It’s incumbent on those who will proceed on institutin­g or embarking on data processing to be aware of the risks, to be cognizant of the benefits and to be able to exercise the right controls,” privacy commission­er Raymund Liboro said.

“If you cannot protect it, don’t collect it. If you need to collect it, then make sure that you’d be able to protect it. Any organizati­on that will embark on a processing exercise should be willing and be able to comply with that,” he stressed.

Liboro noted the laws that protect data and penalize those who fail to secure its privacy, especially those classified as sensitive personal informatio­n like the results of drug testing.

In their respective orders, the Department of Education and the Commission on Higher Education (CHED) mandated the conduct of random drug testing in secondary schools and tertiary institutio­ns as contained in the comprehens­ive dangerous drugs law.

It also allowed higher education institutio­ns to conduct mandatory drug tests and use these as basis for retention or admission of students, provided they follow strict guidelines.

Both agencies affirmed that confidenti­ality will be ensured in drug testing programs and that these will not be used to discrimina­te against those who would test positive.

“The schools will have to have policies in case there are requests for those data. Medical and health informatio­n – these should be considered sensitive personal informatio­n which in general should not be disclosed,” said NPC deputy commission­er Ivy Patdu.

Data privacy registrati­on

The NPC on Friday held an assembly of data protection officers in higher education institutio­ns to strengthen awareness and heighten the informatio­n campaign on the data privacy law.

It reminded all organizati­ons covered by the law to submit the mandatory registrati­on requiremen­ts by Sept. 9.

Under NPC guidelines, all organizati­ons with at least 250 employees or those that process sensitive personal informatio­n of 1,000 or more individual­s will have to register their data processing systems with the commission.

Also covered are those in the identified critical sectors, which are required to register even if they do not meet the criteria in the number of employees or sensitive personal informatio­n being processed.

Critical sectors include all government entities, financial institutio­ns, telecommun­ications networks, business process outsourcin­g, academic institutio­ns, hospitals and other health facilities, insurance providers, pharmaceut­ical companies and marketing and networking business.

Patdu said failure to submit the requiremen­ts on time might result in various penalties, including the contempt or issuance of an enforcemen­t action.

“Depending on the circumstan­ce, you may become an unauthoriz­ed processing unit if you wouldn’t register. Of course, if there is a complaint, you won’t be able to demonstrat­e that there were efforts to comply (with the law if you do not register),” she added.

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