Daily Mail

NHS records can’t be used to find illegal immigrants

- By Ian Drury Home Affairs Editor

ILLEGAL immigrants could escape detection after ministers announced the Home Office will no longer use NHS records to track them down.

Patient records will now only be shared to help trace individual­s facing deportatio­n because they have committed a serious crime.

Ministers tightened the rules after MPs raised concerns the policy breached patient confidenti­ality. Sharing NHS informatio­n with enforcemen­t officers had been part of Government efforts to create a ‘hostile environmen­t’ for illegal immigrants.

Digital Minister Margot James announced the U-turn in the wake of the Windrush scandal during the Parliament­ary debate on the Data Protection Bill.

She said a memorandum of understand­ing on the exchange of informatio­n between the NHS and the Home Office over illegal immigrants, which is said to

‘Breached confidenti­ality’

have been taking place since 2005, was being suspended.In 2016, confidenti­al informatio­n on 8,527 people contained in their NHS records was requested by the Home Office.

NHS Digital, the data network for the healthcare system, provided 5,854 matches – including the surnames, dates of birth, gender, last known addresses and dates of registrati­on.

Crucially it did not request details of medical conditions or any treatment received.

She told MPs that the data would only be used in future ‘to trace an individual who is being considered for deportatio­n action having been investigat­ed for or convicted of a serious criminal offence’.

Conservati­ve MP Sarah Wollaston, who chairs the Commons health select committee and had lodged an amendment to change the rules, said she was ‘delighted’.

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