At Southern Hospice Group, we are committed to protecting your personal information and privacy. This privacy notice describes how we collect and use personal information. We will only ever collect the information we need.
We may update this privacy notice from time to time so please check back periodically. We will notify you of significant changes by placing a notice on our website. Our website and all our communications materials contain a reduced version of our privacy notice in accordance with the requirements of the Data Protection Act 1998 and General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) 2018.
If you have any queries about this privacy notice, please contact us using one of the following methods;
Via our websites;
Write to us at Southern Hospice Group, St Barnabas House, Titnore Lane, Worthing, West Sussex, BN12 6NZ for the attention of Fundraising.
Contact our teams direct via telephone or email:
St Barnabas Hospice
Telephone: 01903 254777
Email: info@stbh.org.uk
Martlets
Telephone: 01273 747455
Email: fundraising@martlets.org.uk
Chestnut Tree House
Telephone: 01903 871820
Email: hello@chestnut.org.uk
We have a senior person responsible for protecting the confidentiality of patient information and enabling appropriate information sharing. This person is called the Caldicott Guardian.
We recognise the importance of protecting our supporters and follow the guidance issued by the Institute of Fundraising on treating donors fairly. We provide high-quality customer care, ensuring anyone donating to the Charity is in a position to make a free and informed decision. Further guidance can be found on the Chartered Institute of Fundraising’s website at https://ciof.org.uk/.
We are a charity, and we depend on your support to continue to provide people affected by terminal illness the very best care and support. We are much more than a group of hospices and we’re working to change perceptions of hospice care.
We help people do the things they love with the time they have. Our life-changing hospice care gives people living with terminal illness hope, purpose and possibility.
St Barnabas Hospice, Martlets Hospice and Chestnut Tree House have provided care and support to those affected by terminal illness for many years. We continue to extend our reach to help as many people in our communities as possible, ensuring that patients, family and friends have access to our services. Our work is made possible only by the generosity of our supporters.
Our services include three sites, two adult’s hospices, St Barnabas Hospice in Worthing and Martlets Hospice in Hove. And our Children’s Hospice, Chestnut Tree House in Arundel.
Both our adult hospices have an inpatient unit, as well as community palliative care teams & hospice at home teams, who care for patients in their own homes and ensure families and individuals are supported in the best way possible. We also run an extensive set of services and groups through our patient and family support and living well teams.
Chestnut Tree House offers hospice care services and community support for children and young people with life-limiting and life-threatening conditions in East and West Sussex and Southeast Hampshire. From specially trained nurses to activity coordinators, counsellors and care support workers – we all work closely together to help you enjoy time as a family, have fun, and make as many precious memories as possible.
Through our extensive and varied services, we go beyond the minimum, the necessary and the prescribed treatment to make people smile.
We’re proud to be at the heart of our communities, bringing them together to support families and individuals affected by terminal illness.
Southern Hospice Group is a registered Charity in England and Wales (Registration number 256789) and a company by guarantee (Registration number 00930107).
Southern Hospice Group Trading Limited is a company limited by guarantee (Registration number 07157835).
Martlets Care Limited is a company limited by guarantee (Registration number 06250709).
We are registered with the Fundraising Regulator.
We are registered with the Information Commissioner’s Office (Registration number Z9704621).
Group VAT registration number GB 974983452.
We collect personal information about you when you interact with us (for example, by phone or online):
Supporters
The types of information we might collect from supporters include your name, postal address, email address, phone numbers, date of birth, next of kin, communication preferences, credit or debit card details, and whether you are a taxpayer so that we can claim Gift Aid. We also hold records of your donations and fundraising efforts alongside the communications that we have had with you. We will not store credit or debit card details after they have been processed.
Service users and family and friends
The types of information we might collect from patients and family members include names, postal addresses, email addresses, phone numbers, date of birth and next of kin as well as special category data which includes health information and that of a personal-sensitive nature. This information is collected for the purposes of providing clinical care services to those referred to us and could be used and shared between departments within the organisation as well as with other health and social care service providers under strict guidelines. We may also receive further information from the NHS which is only shared with us under strict guidelines and where information sharing could improve the delivery of care or is necessary for direct care.
We may collect special category data including but not limited to race, faith, gender, religion, disability and family life for statistical and reporting purposes but these will be anonymised and no individual will be identifiable.
Southern Hospice Group is compliant with the ‘National Data opt-out’ in that we do not share any data beyond a patient’s direct care, unless legally required to do so, for example supplying patient data to the NHS as part of the mandatory Community Services Data Set (CSDS) submission. Providers are legally required to submit full returns of CSDS data, as the Data Provision Notice (DPN) issued under section 259 (10) of the Health and Social Care Act 2012 sets aside the common law duty of confidence in respect of this data.
Patients however do have a right to set a national data opt-out preference to prevent their data being used for purposes beyond their direct care and treatment. Where an opt-out is received from a patient (or their parent or guardian in the case of a child), NHS Digital will exclude the relevant records from any onward dissemination of the data. As such, any patient not wishing to let their data to be used for secondary purposes ( e.g. research or planning) can ‘opt-out’ either via their GP or directly via www.nhs.uk/your-nhs-data-matters/manage-your-choice/ on the NHS website.
If sent to the NHS, data for patients who opt-out are included in aggregate counts for publications etc, but any extracts that go to 3rd party customers (e.g., for research etc) are matched against the national opt-out database, and any records that match the NHS Number of opted out patients are stripped from the extracts. For further explanation of this initiative patients can be view the NHS guidance at https://digital.nhs.uk/services/national-data-opt-out.
You can also make or change a choice for yourself by phone, email or post or for someone else by email or post: https://www.nhs.uk/your-nhs-data-matters/manage-your-choice/other-ways-to-manage-your-choice/
Employees and volunteers
The types of information we might collect from employees and volunteers include your name, postal address, email address, phone numbers, date of birth, next of kin, employment history, disabilities relevant to your employment or volunteering role, and character or employment references. We may collect special category data including but not limited to race, faith, gender, religion, disability and family life for statistical and reporting purposes but these will be anonymised and no individual will be identifiable.
Applicable to all
You may appear in still images or video footage using closed circuit television (CCTV) that is used on our hospice site for security purposes. We also use photos and video footage to promote and celebrate the work that we do for which we ask your consent. This consent can be withdrawn by you at any time.
If you visit our websites we will collect information on how you interact with us through the use of cookies.
The lawful basis and purpose
The lawful basis for processing data held on supporters is the legitimate purpose of raising charitable funds to support the delivery of Southern Hospice Group clinical care services.
The information provided by supporters is used in the following ways:
We do not collect special category data such as disclosure of a health condition or age, about our supporters unless there is a legitimate and/or legal reason for this (for example, if you participate in an event for which we may need to provide support, or if you wish to play the lottery).
The General Data Protection Act applies from 25th May 2018 and we will be asking you to opt in to receive marketing communications for E-Mail, SMS and Telephone. We will continue to send you Marketing and Fundraising information through the post as to how your support makes a difference. However, if you would prefer not to hear from us you can contact us using one of the methods listed at the start of the policy.
Service users and family and friends
The lawful basis for processing service users and next of kin data is the legitimate purpose of providing a health and care service. Special category data held on service users is processed for the purposes of providing a health and care service. If you, a relative or a friend, are cared for or supported by a Southern Hospice Group Hospice, the special category data you provide to us will be used only for the purposes of offering access to and providing you with services including bereavement support, for training/professional development of our staff or for monitoring and improving the quality and efficacy of our services. Southern Hospice Group Hospice will not disclose your personal information to any third party without your consent, except in the following circumstances:
To health and social care professionals and organisations involved in the provision of your care, and always within the appropriate regulations governing sharing of your health records.
Exceptionally, to professional bodies or otherwise as required by law, regulation or codes of practice.
We will not use your information for other purposes without your permission. If you tell us about your own experience with terminal illness or the experience of someone else we will explain how we will use that information. If you don’t want us to use such information for other purposes or change your mind at any time, it will not affect any services we provide. If you receive education, training or mentoring we will use your personal details only for the purposes of offering access to and providing you with such services.
Employees and volunteers
The lawful basis for processing employee and volunteer data is the legitimate purpose of managing the relationship between the Hospice and the employee or volunteer. We use the information collected on our employee and volunteer application forms to identify if you are suitable to work for or volunteer with Southern Hospice Group. If your application is unsuccessful we dispose of your data within six months. If your application is successful we will retain a copy of your application form and your data will be stored electronically to allow us to manage the employment or volunteering relationship we have with you. If you cease to be employed or volunteer by Southern Hospice Group we will retain your personal data for a period of six years.
During the course of your employment or volunteering period, we may monitor your use of our IT systems and data bases to ensure appropriate use for data security purposes.
Storing and processing of information of your payments
Southern Hospice Group adheres to the compliance of the use of card information to industry standards including: Payment Card Industry (PCI) and Data Security Standard (DSS). We only use Payment Card Industry (PCI) compliant providers to collect the data on our behalf. When you use our secure online donation or payment pages you will be directed to a specialist supplier company, who will receive your credit card number and contact information to process the transaction. We do not retain your credit or debit card details. We never keep your credit card or debit card number on our database. Once processed these are destroyed and removed from any forms. We will take payment details from you if you choose to donate or support us in another way financially. We also take payments by cheques and cash. We will record amounts and cheque information for processing purposes.
Goods that you donate for us to sell in our charity shops
We are very grateful for the goods that you donate to our shops to sell to raise funds for the charity. We may ask for your details to claim Gift Aid on your donations. It is your choice if you give us this information.
Sharing your information
We will only share information with any of our employees, officers, insurers, professional advisers, agents, suppliers (including specifically the provider and host of our website or other subcontractors) where we have your permission to do so in accordance with this privacy notice, where it is necessary for a legitimate reason connected with the services we offer or where it is required by law or regulation. For our service users, we will only share your information with family and friends with your consent.
We may disclose your personal information to any member of our group of companies (this means our subsidiaries, our ultimate holding company and all its subsidiaries) insofar as reasonably necessary for the purposes set out in this policy.
We use Microsoft Office 365, which is a multi-tenant cloud service, for our internal office use; this means that internal documents and information which are generated at Southern Hospice Group are stored in cloud services which are hosted within the EEA.
Exceptionally, we may use tools or services which process data outside of the immediate EEA, but only in additional countries which are considered by the EU as having adequate data protection laws.
Additional information for supporters
We work with carefully-selected partners who carry out work on our behalf. These partners include mailing houses, marketing agencies, IT specialists and research firms. The kind of work we may ask them to do includes processing, packaging, mailing and delivering purchases, answering questions about products or services, sending postal mail, emails and text messages, carrying out research or analysis and processing card payments. We only choose partners we can trust. We will only pass personal data to them if they have signed a contract that requires them to:
abide by the requirements of current data protection legislation treat your information as carefully as we would only use the information for the purposes it was supplied (and not for their own purposes or the purposes of any other organization) allow us to carry out checks to ensure they are doing all these things. We will never sell your data to any third party.
We will not share your details with other charities for marketing purposes.
We may also use the information we collect on you to build a profile of our supporters. When building profiles of our supporters, we use a range of profiling and screening techniques using data we have collected directly from you and combine it with;
Information from publicly available sources such as such as charity websites and annual reviews, corporate websites, public social media accounts, the electoral register and Companies House.
Information from reputable external organisations to provide additional socio-demographic information about our supporter base
We may also estimate gift capacity based on visible assets, history of charitable giving and your connection to Southern Hospice Group to identify people who may be able to give a larger gift in support of our work.
We place a great importance on the security of all personally identifiable information associated with our supporters, customers and users. We have security measures in place to protect against the loss, misuse and alteration of personal data under our control. For example, only authorized personnel can access user information and we use secure server software (SSL) to encrypt financial and personal information you input before it is sent to us. However we cannot ensure or guarantee that loss, misuse or alteration of data will not occur while it is under our control.
Where you or we have provided a password enabling you to access parts of our websites or use our services, it is your responsibility to keep this password confidential. Please do not share your password with anyone.
After you have received the services, goods or information you require, we will store your information according to our retention schedule, in line with current data protection legislation. We do not communicate with people that have asked us not to. We will always dispose of information securely, using specialist companies if necessary.
It is important that we keep your personal information up to date. If at any time your circumstances change, you can contact us using one of the methods listed at the start of the policy.
For marketing and communication purposes, registering with the free Telephone Preference Service gives you the opportunity to opt out of receiving unsolicited calls. The Mailing Preference Service will enable you to register to have your name taken off direct mailing lists. You can also register your preferences with the Fundraising Preference Services.
You have the following rights with regard to the data we store about you within legal parameters:
If you wish to exercise any of these rights, you can contact us using one of the methods listed at the start of the policy.
You have the right to ask us for a copy of the personal information we hold about you or ask us to change it if you think it is wrong. Please contact us using one of the methods listed at the start of the policy.
If you are unhappy with our use of your personal data, we urge you in the first instance to contact us, our complaints policy is available upon request. You have the right to complain to the Information Commissioner’s Office.
We use these to improve the user’s experience of our website, temporarily store data and understand the parts of the website that users are visiting. If you are registered with us, a cookie will identify you when you visit and help us to personalise our website for you. If you are not registered with us, a cookie will help us gather statistics on the use of our website anonymously. You can set your browser to not accept cookies, but this may impact on your user experience. You can view more information about cookies that we use by clicking on the link at the bottom of our homepage.
This privacy notice only applies to Southern Hospice Group and its subsidiary companies. We ensure any third parties we work with are fully compliant with current data protection legislation. You can read the privacy notices of our partner companies when you link through to them (for example, to donate, register for an event or pay in the online shop).
We may process your personal information for carefully considered and specific purposes which are in our interest and enable us to enhance the services we provide, but which we believe also benefit you our very kind supporters.
Please see below for some of these interests and when we may process your information in this way:
We may update this policy from time to time by publishing a new version on our website.
You should check this page occasionally to ensure you are happy with any changes to this policy.
We may notify you of changes to this policy by email.
Glossary of terms
Personal Data: any information relating to a living person who can be directly or indirectly identified by reference to an identifier.
Special Category Data: personal data which is classed as more sensitive so, therefore, requires more protection. For example, information about a person’s race, ethnic origin, politics, religion, trade union membership, genetics, biometrics, health, sex life or sexual orientation.