Opticians in Ireland — both optometrists and dispensing opticians — process sensitive health data through eye examinations, prescription records, and retinal imaging. As both healthcare providers and retail businesses selling eyewear, opticians have a dual data processing role. Registered with CORU, opticians must comply with GDPR alongside professional standards. The increasing use of digital retinal imaging and OCT scanning means opticians now process highly detailed biometric-adjacent health data.
KEY GDPR RISKS
Retinal images and OCT scan data — highly detailed biometric health data — stored on equipment without encryption or clearly defined retention periods
Patient prescription data shared with online eyewear retailers who request it, without verifying the retailer's data protection practices
Children's eye health data processed during school screening programmes without adequate parental consent mechanisms
Marketing databases built from patient appointment records used to send promotional offers for eyewear without separate marketing consent
Patient health data from eye examinations revealing systemic conditions (diabetes, hypertension) shared with GPs without fully informing the patient
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Opticians in Carlow
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Opticians in Tipperary
Opticians in Waterford
Opticians in Westmeath
Opticians in Wexford
Opticians in Wicklow
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Dental clinics in Ireland process sensitive health data including dental records, X-rays, treatment plans, and medical histories that may reveal wider health conditions. Many dental practices also process financial data for private treatment plans and payment arrangements. The Dental Council of Ireland sets professional standards for record-keeping that interact with GDPR requirements. As dental practices increasingly use digital imaging and cloud-based practice management software, data protection management becomes more complex.
Physiotherapists in Ireland process detailed health data about patients' injuries, conditions, treatment plans, and recovery progress. Many physiotherapy practices also handle insurance claim data, employer referral information, and medico-legal reports. Registered with CORU, physiotherapists must comply with GDPR alongside professional standards that require comprehensive clinical record-keeping. The growth of telehealth physiotherapy adds digital data processing dimensions.
Veterinary clinics in Ireland process personal data about pet owners and farm clients, including contact details, financial information, and increasingly detailed client records. While animal health data itself is not personal data, it is invariably linked to the owner's identity. Veterinary practices registered with the Veterinary Council of Ireland also handle prescription records, insurance claims, and sometimes sensitive data about animal welfare cases. GDPR applies to the owner and client data, not the animal data directly.
Mental health practitioners in Ireland — including psychologists, psychotherapists, and counsellors — process the most deeply sensitive personal data of any healthcare profession. Session notes, psychological assessments, and therapy records reveal intimate details about individuals' mental states, relationships, traumas, and behaviours. Whether registered with the Psychological Society of Ireland, IACP, or ICP, practitioners must handle this data with the utmost care under GDPR, balancing therapeutic confidentiality with data protection obligations.
Home care providers in Ireland deliver personal care, nursing, and support services in clients' homes, processing sensitive health data, daily care records, and access information for private residences. The distributed nature of home care — with carers working independently in clients' homes using mobile devices — creates unique GDPR challenges. Providers contracted by the HSE must also meet specific data protection requirements under their service agreements. HIQA standards for home support services add further regulatory dimensions.
Private hospitals and clinics in Ireland process large volumes of sensitive health data across multiple departments, from patient admissions and surgical records to diagnostic imaging and pharmacy dispensing. Operating alongside the public health system, private hospitals must comply with GDPR, the Data Protection Act 2018, HIQA standards, and Medical Council guidelines. The scale and complexity of data processing — involving hundreds of staff, multiple clinical systems, and extensive third-party relationships — requires a structured data protection framework with dedicated resources.