Thousands of sensitive documents carrying YOUR private data are being illegally shared by public sector workers.
A Sunday Post probe has discovered hundreds of police, NHS and council staff have accessed highly secret personal files meant to be kept away from prying eyes.
The most common breaches involve workers snooping into the lives of people they know, including relatives, neighbours and friends.
In some cases highly confidential data has been openly “shared” among groups of colleagues. In others, people’s private details have even been sold on for material gain.
Yet, despite the breaches, as many as a third of the perpetrators are let off without being reprimanded.
Daniel Nesbitt, of civil liberties group Big Brother Watch, said: “Breaches of data protection are an all-too-regular occurrence. Until real deterrents are put in place this problem will just get worse.”
The Sunday Post investigated the data protection breaches of our three biggest publicly-funded institutions the NHS, Police Scotland and our 32 local councils.
A total of 900 NHS workers have been caught breaching the Data Protection Act, which sets out the strict guidelines on how your personal information is used by organisations, businesses or the government, since 2010.
At Scottish councils, at least 300 staff broke the rules either deliberately or accidently, with teachers, housing chiefs and Education bosses all illegally sharing data, losing unencrypted laptops, phones and tablets, and posting sensitive information about others online.
And 37 police officers have been disciplined for similar offences since 2009.
Some of the most shocking breaches stem from the NHS. They include numerous cases where staff have accessed the records of patients without authority, sharing sensitive data on social media, and illicitly browsing through the records of family and friends.
One nursing and midwifery worker in Aberdeen was forced to delete videos of a patient taken within hospital grounds, while an NHS Lothian employee used a mobile phone to take a picture of a “patient-identifiable record”.
Disciplinary action has been taken against staff who have deliberately stolen files and shared them with third parties, while one NHS Tayside blunder saw the details of 500 patients inadvertently posted to a member of the public.
Despite that, aone in five faced no disciplinary action at all.
Dr Jean Turner, of the Scotland Patients Association, said the breaches are more than harmless banter.
She said: “People forget that information is only supposed to be in your hands if you need to know. To find that so much is being looked at by others is extremely worrying.
“It’s shocking that an organisation as big as the NHS doesn’t have measures in place at all times to prevent such breaches.
“It is wrong and can have terribly damaging effects to those involved if private information is put out in the open.”
Twenty-two of Scotland’s 32 local councils confirmed they’ve dealt with a combined 298 cases of data breaches.
Despite that figure being well below that of the NHS, 36% of all those found ignoring guidelines had no action taken against them.
A Police Scotland spokesman said: “All employees receive training about the Data Protection Act and the importance of lawfully handling the information held on our systems. Any inappropriate use is treated very seriously and our staff are aware of this.”
A spokesman for NHS Scotland said: “We take patient confidentiality very seriously and believe any data breach is unacceptable.”
Council umbrella body Cosla said: “Obviously councils take this issue very seriously and try to avoid data protection breaches at all costs.
“The bottom line is that with the amount of data handled by councils the number of breaches over a five-year period is not overly excessive. Councils work with the information commissioner to ensure lessons are learned.”
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