So what is getting up peoples backs then
The thought of having to pay your doctor or the thought of losing your guns if the practice refuses to do the forms?
You do not lose your guns if your own GP refuses. You will be told by the police to go get a s GDPR SAR printout of your medical report/history from your own go which Legally they must give you, then go and find another GP, any GP (an alternative) who is willing to review the printout and send a letter as per the example the police have on their website which asks if you have EVER suffered from certain medical conditions/illness.
So you have the printout and opportunity to amend/retype it, you take it to a GP you have never met and will never meet again, or may be in five years. He spends a few minutes looking at it and then emails the police.
And if it is like my printout the online records are only for 1/3 of my life so 2/3 are still on paper held by my own/registered GP so totally unavailable to the alternative GP. But hey the alternative GP “signs” to say you have never had one of the medical conditions. And as it is mandatory for the GP report the opportunity for fraud or and error is now massive ie for Kent per year an approximate increase of around 115 under the HOG 2016 to nearly 6000 but the GP is getting rich and in the event of mass shooting the Chief Constable will be on TV holding the medical report letter in his hand shouting not my fault !
But not a problem according to the response to my complaint against the chief constable of Kent made to the crime commissioner and investigated by an independent police inspector.
Because they said the alternative GP would compare the printout to a national central medical database and spot any errors and see your entire life’s medical history.
Which is total BS as no such national database exists according to primary care support England at best it will be 2025 before it does and 2022 before all records are digitalised within all GP surgeries but these dates keep slipping.
Then their is the issue of a GP who is not your own GP having access to your medical records for non medical care that requires your consent the consent of the data controller who is your registered GP and possible other issues.
Their is the ability for you to share your online medical records with a third party but again currently they are very unlikely to be your complete medical history.
Not even a hospital can currently access you online medical records for direct medical care without your consent, keep spreading the BS Kent.
Hence seriously considering an appeal to the IOPC.
P.s the only records PCSE does keep on a centralised database is for the dead they are kept for ten years perhaps it these Kent are using giving how long it takes them to process an application.
Sorry for the long posts.