We are now able to offer the use of email for
appointment reminders. In addition physicians may choose to communicate
with patients via email if appropriate. Patients must consent to
the use of email. Read to the bottom of this page to submit
your consent.
If you intend to receive our emails, please remember to update
your address book (with info@tmcdocs.info), and/or to check your
junk/spam folder.
Our office staff and physicians use reasonable means to protect
the security and confidentiality of email information sent and received.
However, because of the risks identified below, we cannot guarantee
the security and confidentiality of email communication. Please
read below:
*EMERGENCY PROBLEMS
E-mail should never be used for emergency problems. In the event
of an emergency, call 911 or go to your nearest Hospital Emergency
Room.
*URGENT PROBLEMS
E-mail should never be used for urgent problems. In these cases,
the patient should call 905-889-3634 or go to an Emergency Room.
*SENSITIVE MEDICAL INFORMATION
E-mail should be concise. If the patient has a problem that is too
complex or sensitive to discuss via e-mail, the patient should make
an appointment by calling: 905-889-3634.
RISKS ASSOCIATED WITH USING EMAIL
Some, but not all, of the risks with email are listed here:
- Email can be immediately broadcast worldwide and received by
many intended and unintended recipients;
- Email senders can easily misaddress an email;
- Email is easier to falsify than handwritten or signed documents;
- Backup copies of email may exist even after the sender or recipient
has deleted his or her copy;
- Employers and on-line services have a right to archive and inspect
emails transmitted through their systems;
- Email can be intercepted, altered, forwarded, or used without
authorization or detection;
- Email can be used to introduce system computer viruses; and
- Email can be used as evidence in court.
Consent to the use of e-mail includes agreement with the following
conditions:
1. PATIENT OBLIGATIONS WHEN CONSENTING TO EMAIL
- the patient shall not use e-mail for medical emergencies, urgent
problems or other time sensitive matters.
- If the patient's e-mail requires or invites a response from
the staff or physicians, and the patient has not received a response
within a reasonable time period, it is the patient's responsibility
to follow up to determine whether the intended recipient received
the e-mail and when the recipient will respond.
- All e-mails to or from the patient concerning diagnosis or treatment
will be imported into and made part of the patient's electronic
medical record. Because they are part of the medical record, other
individuals authorized to access the medical record, such as secretarial
staff, nurses and billing personnel, will have access to those
e-mails.
- Medical staff may forward e-mails internally to members of the
Physician's staff if necessary for diagnosis, treatment, reimbursement,
and other handling. Staff will not, however, forward emails to
independent third parties without the patient's prior written
consent, except as authorized or required by law.
- The patient should not use e-mail for communication regarding
sensitive medical information, such as information regarding sexually
transmitted diseases, AIDS/HIV, mental health, developmental disability,
or substance abuse.
- The patient is responsible for informing Provider of any types
of information the patient does not want to be sent by e-mail,
in addition to those set out above.
2. PATIENT RESPONSIBILITIES AND INSTRUCTIONS
To communicate by e-mail, the patient shall:
a. Limit or avoid use of his/her employer's computer.
b. Inform Provider of changes in his/her email address.
c. Confirm that he/she has received and read the e-mail from the
office staff or physician.
d. Put the patient's name in the body of the e-mali, including
a phone number at which the patient can be reached.
e. Include the category of the communication in the e-mail's subject
line, for routing purposes (e.g. billing question).
f. Review the e-mail to make sure it is clear and that all relevant
information if provided before sending to Provider.
g. Take precautions to preserve the confidentiality of e-mail, such
as using screen savers and safeguarding his/her computer password.
h. Withdraw consent by e-mail or written communication to Provider.
3. ALTERNATE FORMS OF COMMUNICATION
The patient understands that he/she may also communicate with the
physician via telephone or during a scheduled appointment and that
e-mail is not a substitute for the care that may be provided during
an office visit. Appointments should be made to discuss any new
issues as well as any sensitive medical information.
4. TYPES OF E-MAIL TRANSMISSIONS THAT PATIENT AGREES TO
SEND AND/OR RECEIVE
The types of information that can be communicated via e-mail with
the physician include patient referral information and appointment
reminders, health card number clarification and patient information,
and may include communication of results. If you are not sure if
the issue you wish to discuss should be included in an e-mail, you
should call the Provider's office to schedule an appointment.
5. SECURITY MEASURES USED BY THE PROVIDER
As stated above, communicating via e-mail does come with privacy
risk as stated above. While the office staff and physicians cannot
guarantee total confidentiality, they will use reasonable safeguards
to protect your health care information as required by law. The
security measures taken by the staff and physicians include password
protected screen savers, policies and procedures, and staff training
requirements.
6. HOLD HARMLESS
I agree to indemnify and hold harmless the Physician, his/her medical
practice, employees, website designer, from and against all losses,
expenses, damages and costs, including reasonable attorney's fees,
relating to or arising from any information loss due to technical
failure, my use of the internet to communicate with the office or
the use of practice web-site, any arrangements you make based on
information obtained at the Site, any products or services obtained
through the Site, and any breach by me of these restrictions and
conditions. The Provider does not warrant that the functions contained
in any materials provided will be uninterrupted or error-free, that
defects will be corrected, or that the Provider's website or server
that makes such site available is free of viruses or other harmful
components.
7. TERMINATION OF THE E-MAIL RELATIONSHIP
The Provider shall have the right to immediately terminate the e-mail
relationship with you if he/she determines, in his/her sole discretion,
that you have violated the terms and conditions set forth above
or otherwise breached this agreement, or have engaged in conduct
which the Provider determines, in his/her sole discretion, to be
unacceptable. The e-mail relationship between the Provider and the
patient will terminate in the event the Provider, in his/her sole
discretion, no longer wishes to utilize the e-mail to communicate
with all of his/her patients.
8. PATIENT ACKNOWLEDGEMENT AND AGREEMENT
I have discussed with the Provider or his/her representative and
I acknowledge that I have read and fully understand this consent
form. I understand the risks associated with the communication of
e-mail between the Provider and me, and consent to the conditions
herein. In addition, I agree to the instructions outlined herein,
as well as any other instructions that Provider may impose to communicate
with patients by e-mail. Any questions I may have had were answered.
Submit your
consent
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