The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Yet GPs must STILL follow crazy law that bans virus warnings

- By Glen Owen

DOCTORS will be banned from warning patients about the risks of coronaviru­s under EU rules that are set to become law in Britain despite Brexit.

Public bodies face being fined up to £17million by Brussels if they send unsolicite­d messages by text or email – even as part of a public health campaign.

The plan has caused fury in Downing Street because of the role of UK Informatio­n Commission­er Elizabeth Denham, who is working to put EU data protection laws into a statutory code that the Government would have no power to amend.

One senior Government source last night described Ms Denham as an ‘unelected antiBrexit pen-pusher’.

The plans have been drawn up as part of a consultati­on by Ms Denham on a new statutory code of practice for direct marketing that will enact EU data protection and e-privacy regulation­s.

No10 advisers say that if the code becomes law, health campaigns would be ineffectiv­e because the public would be forced to ‘opt in’ to receive advice by email or text on health threats such as the potentiall­y fatal coronaviru­s.

Council tax bills would also rise because local authoritie­s would be forced to print leaflets to publicise services such as bin collection­s.

Under the code, GPs would be banned from sending text messages to patients giving even simple informatio­n such as: ‘Our flu clinic is now open. If you would like a flu vaccinatio­n please call the surgery to make an appointmen­t.’

Ms Denham, whose salary and pension benefits come to nearly £245,000 a year, investigat­ed the use of data by Leave campaigner­s, including Boris Johnson’s senior adviser Dominic Cummings in the 2016 referendum campaign, but found no evidence of wrongdoing. She once said: ‘I don’t think Brexit should mean Brexit when it comes to standards of data protection.’

Conservati­ve MP Ben Bradley told The Mail on Sunday: ‘We have the left the European Union, but anti-Brexit quangos are continuing to gold-plate EU laws.

‘Such bonkers rules threaten to put public safety at risk by underminin­g vital anti-flu and coronaviru­s campaigns.

‘Even town halls giving advice on your next bin collection might be banned under these bully-boy diktats.

‘Given that we have waved goodbye to the EU, we should be cutting back its reams of red tape, not adding to it.’

‘Bonkers EU rules are threat to public health’

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