If you run a dental clinic in Carlow, you’re handling personal data every single day — from customer records to employee files. With over 3,000 SMEs in Carlow and the Data Protection Commission actively issuing fines, GDPR compliance isn’t something you can afford to ignore. Here’s exactly what you need to know.
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Yes. Every dental clinic in Carlow that processes personal data of EU residents must comply with GDPR. This includes collecting customer names, email addresses, payment details, or any information that can identify a person. Non-compliance can result in fines of up to €20 million or 4% of annual global turnover. The Data Protection Commission (DPC) in Ireland is actively enforcing these rules.
RISK ASSESSMENT
Dental X-rays and clinical photographs stored on unencrypted devices or shared across systems without adequate access controls
Patient medical history forms revealing conditions beyond dental health (e.g. diabetes, heart conditions, HIV status) processed without recognising the full scope of special category data
Treatment plan documents containing detailed health and financial data emailed to patients or insurance companies without encryption
Before-and-after clinical photographs used for marketing or training without explicit patient consent
Patient recall and appointment reminder systems sending health-related information (e.g. 'your periodontal check is due') via SMS without considering confidentiality
DATA INVENTORY
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REQUIRED DOCUMENTS
Every Dental Clinic in Ireland needs these documents to demonstrate GDPR compliance.
STEP BY STEP
Implement encrypted storage for all digital dental records, X-rays, and clinical photographs, with role-based access controls.
Review patient medical history forms to ensure the scope of data collected is proportionate and that patients understand this is special category data being processed for healthcare purposes.
Create a specific consent process for clinical photography, clearly distinguishing between photos taken for clinical records and those for marketing or educational purposes.
Establish Data Processing Agreements with dental laboratories that receive patient impressions and records, and with cloud-based practice management software providers.
Review appointment reminder systems to ensure SMS and email reminders do not contain specific health information that could breach confidentiality if seen by others.
Train all clinic staff — including dental nurses and receptionists — on patient data confidentiality and GDPR procedures.
Implement a retention schedule aligned with Dental Council guidance, typically retaining records for at least 10 years after the last treatment.
COMMON PITFALLS
Using before-and-after clinical photographs on the clinic website or social media without obtaining explicit, informed consent from the patient for marketing use.
Sending appointment reminders via SMS that include specific treatment details (e.g. 'root canal appointment') that could be read by anyone with access to the patient's phone.
Storing dental X-rays and clinical photos on unencrypted USB drives, personal laptops, or shared cloud accounts without adequate security.
Failing to recognise that patient medical history forms (which often ask about heart conditions, diabetes, medications, and pregnancy) contain special category health data beyond dental information.
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Every day your Dental Clinic in Carlow operates without proper GDPR compliance is a risk. The DPC is increasing enforcement across Ireland — get ahead of it today.
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