General Ethical Guidelines For Good Practice in Telehealth: Health Professions Council of South Africa
General Ethical Guidelines For Good Practice in Telehealth: Health Professions Council of South Africa
General Ethical Guidelines For Good Practice in Telehealth: Health Professions Council of South Africa
Booklet No: 10
E-mail:
professionalpractice@hpcsa.co.za
Website: http://www.hpcsa.co.za
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one’s fellow human beings and society. This makes the practice in the
HPCSA presents the following ethical guidelines to guide and direct the
conduct is evaluated.
HPCSA].
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Contents
DEFINITIONS .................................................................................................................iv
1. Introduction .......................................................................................................... 1
2. Purpose ................................................................................................................ 2
3. Applicability of telehealth ...................................................................................... 2
4. Types of telehealth ............................................................................................... 3
4.1 Routine Telehealth ......................................................................................... 3
4.2 Specialist Telehealth ...................................................................................... 4
4.3 Emergency Telehealth ................................................................................... 4
5. Ethical guidelines ................................................................................................. 4
5.1 Competence, Registration and Authorisation .............................................. 4
5.2 Healthcare practitioner-patient relationship ................................................. 5
5.3 Assumption of primary responsibility ........................................................... 6
5.4 Considerations for Telehealth...................................................................... 6
5.5 Evaluation and treatment of patients ........................................................... 6
5.6 Professional duties ....................................................................................... 7
5.7 Duty to inform and informed consent ............................................................ 7
5.8 Patient confidentiality ................................................................................... 9
5.9 Quality, security and safety of patient information and records .................. 10
5.9.1 Quality ........................................................................................................... 10
DEFINITIONS
1. INTRODUCTION
1.4 These guidelines are intended to guide practitioners who use Telehealth to always
ensure that, the clinical needs of patients are met with favourable outcomes to the
benefit of the patient.
1.5 The guidelines must be read as a whole and not piece-meal as the overall purpose
may be lost. The guidelines must further be read in conjunction with other ethical
booklets of the HPCSA which include but are not limited to:
2. PURPOSE
2.1 provide an ethical framework that draws from the core values and standards;
3. APPLICABILITY OF TELEHEALTH
3.2 Any suitable Information and Communication Technology (ICT) platforms, such as
cellular phones, telephone, Skype, Teams, Goole meet or any similar virtual
technology, to exchange information for the diagnosis and treatment of diseases
and injuries, research, and evaluation, and for the continuing education of health
professionals. Although Telehealth has become an essential tool in alleviating
human resource crises and supporting primary healthcare services, particularly
those of vulnerable communities in South Africa, it also raises important ethical
and legal issues that practitioners must carefully consider.
3.3 When using Telehealth, all principles of good practice in relation to patient consent,
confidentiality, and good record keeping etcetera still apply.
3.4 The usage of social media platforms for the purpose of Telehealth is not desirable.
Health practitioners are advised not to interact with patients via social media
platforms as a failure to maintain strictly professional relationships with patients
could result in ethical dilemmas.
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3.5 The Protection of Personal Information Act (POPIA) outlaws the acquisition of data
about an individual’s personal, including health, outside a healthcare setting. By
having access to patients’ social media profiles, health care practitioners may find
themselves privy to personal patient information that has not been shared in the
healthcare setting.
3.6 Health practitioners may choose to share personal information about themselves
with their patients during face-to-face consultations, and social media does not
offer a similar level of control over the extent of dissemination and type of content
shared.
4. TYPES OF TELEHEALTH
4.1 Routine Telehealth
a) Commonly patient-initiated or used by practitioner to obtain second opinion from
other practitioners. Should preferably be practised in circumstances where there
is an already established practitioner-patient relationship, and where such a
relationship does not exist, practitioners may still consult using Telehealth provided
such consultations are done in the best clinical interest of patients.
b) This practice is only used as an adjunct to normal medical practice, and only
replaces face-to-face services where the quality and safety of patient care is not
compromised, and the best available resources are used in securing and
transmitting patient information.
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5. ETHICAL GUIDELINES
5.1 Competence, Registration and Authorisation
a) The relationship between the patient and the healthcare practitioner is established
when the practitioner agrees to treat the patient and the patient provides informed
consent to be treated.
b) The relationship between the patient and the healthcare practitioner must be based
on mutual trust and respect.
c) Core ethical values as outlined in the HPCSA guidelines for healthcare
practitioners are always applicable in Telehealth and the fact that a patient’s
personal information can be stored, processed, and moved using electronic means
does not alter the ethical duties of health care practitioner in this regard.
d) The professional discretion of healthcare practitioners engaging in Telehealth
regarding the diagnosis, scope of care or treatment should not be limited or
influenced by nonclinical considerations of Telehealth technologies.
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a) The practitioner in charge is responsible for the treatment, decisions and other
recommendations given to the patient, as well as for keeping detailed records of the
patient’s condition and information transmitted.
b) The consulting practitioner must also securely keep detailed records, online or
otherwise, of the professional services he or she delivers as well as the information
he or she receives and on which the advice is based.
c) The consulting practitioner must further ensure that the advice on treatment given are
understood by the consulting practitioner and/or the patient.
d) Practitioner may charge consultations fees for services undertaken through
Telehealth platforms.
e) HPCSA strongly cautions against practices that may amount to over-servicing and
perverse incentives.
a) The need for review or to assess the severity of symptoms both physical and
psychological,
b) Previous knowledge of the patient/client as well as the family and wider situation,
as appropriate, alongside access to their clinical records.
c) A need to physically examine the patient/client.
d) Previous medical history which may trigger a need to see the patient face-to-face.
It is good practice for practitioners to consider the social circumstances of the patient
where the clinical or social background would require seeing the patient/client.
a) A documented medical evaluation must be done and the relevant clinical history
necessary to diagnose underlying conditions as well as any contra-indications
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This section must be read in conjunction with HPCSA’s guidelines regarding informed
consent in Booklet 4 and the provisions of the National Health Act.
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a) Informed consent for the use of Telehealth can be obtained in writing or recorded
orally.
b) Informed consent documentation for Telehealth practice should include the
following:
i) The identities of the patient and the servicing healthcare practitioner.
ii) Agreement by the patient that the practitioner to decide whether the
condition being diagnosed or treated is appropriate for a Telehealth
consultation and if there is no consensus, the servicing practitioner in
charge must ensure that face to face consultation is conducted.
iii) The healthcare practitioner’s practice number.
iv) The types of transmissions consented to using Telehealth technologies
(e.g., prescriptions, refills, appointment scheduling, patient education
etc.).
c) When Telehealth is used the patient should be informed regarding who will
access their information, the purpose of the Telehealth service, the cost of the
service and what the implications of the use of such information will be.
d) It is the duty and responsibility of the practitioner in charge to obtain express
informed consent for Telehealth purposes.
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e) A copy of the consent form should be kept with patient’s records and a duplicate
given to the patient, when required.
f) In the case of videoconference consultations, the patient must be aware of the
presence of other people on the other side, and that the patient’s identity may be
revealed to such people and must consent to this.
a) The patient must always be assured that their confidentiality is protected during
Telehealth consultation.
b) Patient confidentiality should be ensured at both the practitioners involved and
should follow the provisions of the Constitution, the National Health Act No 61 of
2003, the Promotion of Access to Information Act No 2 of 2000, the Protection of
Personal Information Act No 4 of 2013, the Common law and the HPCSA’s
ethical guidelines on patient confidentiality in Booklet 5, which generally state
that it is every practitioner’s duty to make sure that information is effectively
protected against improper disclosure at all times.
c) HPCSA’s guidelines on confidentiality further provides guidelines on how patient
information may be disclosed for example, in the case of research, education,
clinical audit, financial audit or even for the publication of case histories and
photographs.
i) Confidentiality;
ii) Healthcare personnel apart from the healthcare practitioners who will
process the electronic information;
iii) Hours of operation;
iv) Types of transactions that are permitted electronically;
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i) Patient-practitioners communications;
ii) Prescriptions;
iii) Laboratory and test results;
iv) Evaluations and consultations;
v) Records of past care;
vi) Instructions obtained or produced in connection to Telehealth technologies;
and
vii) Records of informed consents to treatment and use of Telehealth
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The patient’s health records, data and platform bandwidth, established during the
session of Telehealth must be accessible, online, or physical, and documented for both
the healthcare practitioners involved and their patients.
c) The practitioner must ensure that the confidentiality mechanisms employed to ensure
confidentiality must be available when required.
d) It is the registered healthcare practitioner’s responsibility to ensure that non-registered
personnel who may be offering auxiliary or technical services, are aware of the need
for such quality, security, and safety and that they adhere to the stipulated guidelines.
a) Healthcare practitioners should not practice Telehealth without ensuring that the
equipment and accessories used are optimally operational.
b) Periodical quality control tests and servicing of equipment should be carried out
and records kept for verification.
c) The quality and quantity of patient information received should be sufficient and
relevant for the patient’s clinical condition in order to ensure that accurate medical
decisions and recommendations are made for the benefit of the patient
g) Where images are transmitted from one location to the other, it is the responsibility
of both the practitioners to ensure quality and integrity of the platform to maintain
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confidentiality and that there is no critical loss of image resolution from acquisition
to final display.
5.9.3 Security
a) Patient information should only be transmitted from one site to the other and
stored, with the full knowledge and approval of the patient, in line with the informed
consent guidelines.
b) Only the information that is relevant to the clinical history of the patient should be
transmitted electronically.
f) There are three factors central to the security of patient information, namely:
i) Privacy: Who can access it?
ii) Authenticity: Who sends the information?
iii) Integrity: Has the information been altered during its transmission through the
public networks?
5.9.4 Safety
6.1 Practitioners are advised to ensure that they manage patients’ information in
accordance with requirements of POPIA.
SOURCES CONSULTED