Policies, checklists, and monitoring to keep your Cork business on the right side of the DPC. Start in under 2 minutes.
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Every year, the Data Protection Commission opens investigations into Irish businesses that mishandle personal data. Mental Health Practitioners in Cork are not immune — especially when it comes to therapy session notes containing deeply sensitive personal disclosures stored on unencrypted personal laptops or in home offices without adequate physical security.
Cork is Ireland's second-largest economic centre, with a powerful pharmaceutical and life sciences cluster including Pfizer, Eli Lilly, and Johnson & Johnson. The tech sector thrives with Apple's European headquarters and a growing startup scene. The county's food heritage is nationally renowned, with Ballymaloe and the English Market underpinning a vibrant artisan food economy. With around 32,000 SMEs across Cork, many mental health practitioners near Cork City and throughout the county process therapy session notes and clinical records and psychological assessment reports and psychometric test results on a daily basis. Under the GDPR and the Data Protection Act 2018, all of this data must be collected, stored, and managed lawfully.
This guide gives you a clear, actionable path to full GDPR compliance — built specifically for mental health practitioners in Cork.
Yes — it's a legal requirement. Any mental health practitioner in Cork processing personal data must meet GDPR standards. This covers everything from customer names and emails to CCTV footage and HR files. The DPC enforces compliance across all Irish businesses regardless of size, with fines of up to €20 million.
RISK ASSESSMENT
Therapy session notes containing deeply sensitive personal disclosures stored on unencrypted personal laptops or in home offices without adequate physical security
Psychological assessment reports shared with employers, insurers, or solicitors containing more clinical detail than necessary for the requesting purpose
Couples and family therapy records containing personal data about multiple individuals, creating complex data subject rights scenarios
Client data from online therapy platforms stored by third-party technology providers without adequate Data Processing Agreements
Waiting room encounters that could inadvertently reveal that an individual is receiving mental health treatment, particularly in small communities
DATA INVENTORY
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REQUIRED DOCUMENTS
Every Mental Health Practitioner in Ireland needs these documents to demonstrate GDPR compliance. ComplianceKit generates all 8 policy types with a living compliance score that tracks your progress.
STEP BY STEP
Provide every client with a clear, accessible privacy notice before therapy commences, explaining data collection, storage, confidentiality, and the limited circumstances in which disclosure may occur.
Implement encrypted storage for all client records — whether digital or in locked, secure filing — with access limited solely to the treating practitioner.
Review how reports are prepared for third parties (employers, insurers, courts) to ensure data minimisation, providing only the clinical opinion requested rather than full session notes.
If using online therapy platforms, conduct a data protection assessment of the platform and ensure a Data Processing Agreement is in place.
Consider the layout and scheduling of the practice to minimise the risk of clients encountering each other in waiting areas, particularly in small communities.
Establish a clear protocol for couples and family therapy records, defining how data subject rights (access, deletion) will be managed when records contain data about multiple individuals.
Implement a data retention schedule aligned with professional body guidance — typically at least seven years after the last session, or longer for certain client groups.
COMMON PITFALLS
Storing therapy session notes on personal laptops without encryption, leaving deeply sensitive client data vulnerable to theft or unauthorised access.
Providing employers or insurers with full therapy session notes rather than a focused clinical summary addressing only the specific question asked.
Failing to address the complexity of couples and family therapy records when one party makes a Subject Access Request — the records contain personal data about multiple individuals.
Not conducting a data protection assessment of online therapy platforms before using them for client sessions.
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Everything you need to know about GDPR compliance for your business.
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Every day your Mental Health Practitioner in Cork operates without proper GDPR compliance is a risk. The DPC is increasing enforcement across Ireland — get ahead of it today.
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