I strongly suspect this is not a system error, and is a feature not a bug.
Midwifery has revealed a flaw in the system as it applies in their routine care/administration of births, as they will routinely be engaged in the creation of a new patient record (and gender identity is inappropriate).
Creating new healthcare records is rarely the case in other areas of healthcare. Most often a patient record already exists in primary care and this data is electronically transferred from primary care(GP records) to hospital records via confirmation of demographic details with patients ie being routinely asked to confirm your name, dob, NHS No, registered GP etc.
I have never seen a healthcare record that records both sex AND gender identity in the demographic fields.
The correction (if indeed the IT supplier can supply one) in this case will be to change the field gender identity to sex, for births . I say this simply because I didnt see anything in that article that suggested the Trusts want to maintain the integrity of accurate records for older patients....so what about patients who are children or adults?
I suspect
- the hospital records referred to (in this article), the data field labelled 'gender identity' wiĺl be prepopulated from the GP record with sex data (sometimes I've seen this field called gender).
*Hospital staff at intake will be required to ask patient their gender identity and amend the hospital record if there is conflict between gender identity recorded, and pt gender identity self reported.
So what then happens to the primary healthcare care record when the patient is discharged? Will the primary healthcare record (GP) be automatically, or manually updated on receipt of hospital discharge summary? These tasks are often not undertaken by HC professionals who may in all innocence not consider the healthcare implications of accurately recording biological detail.
There is current and clearly ongoing risk of contaminating health care records by removing a reliable source for biological data. Whilst this is most glaring in terms of accurately monitoring growth/development of infants. The case for accurate healthcare records is lifelong.
This is in essence self ID and has been the case for a number of years annoyingly. So I'm glad it's getting sunlight. Thank you for sharing the article.