Cancer Council Australia supports the importance the community places on the maintenance of confidentiality of individuals' personal and/or sensitive information. This extends to the collection and management of information held in its records regarding individuals.
Cancer Council Australia is a non-government, not-for-profit organisation whose core business is cancer control. Cancer Council Australia also takes a lead role in national fundraising on behalf of its members, which are the eight state and territory Cancer Councils. In order to pursue these areas of activity, Cancer Council Australia assures the community of its commitment to privacy of personal information.
The Privacy Amendment (Private Sector) Act 2000, effective December 21 2001, sets out guidelines which regulate how private sector organisations should treat personal and/or sensitive information they collect, use, handle or store.
The NPPs set minimum standards for:
This includes information about:
The National Privacy Principles establish 10 principles to which an organisation must comply in regard to personal and sensitive information.
Reasonable steps will be taken to ensure information collected and used is complete, accurate and up-to-date.
Information held on an individual is accessible to them on request (except where frivolous and vexatious) and will generally be available free of charge. Reasonable steps will be taken to ensure the information provided is accurate and up-to-date.
Identifiers used will be unique to Cancer Council Australia.
Individuals have the option of not identifying themselves when dealing with Cancer Council Australia.
Cancer Council Australia does not collect sensitive information about individuals unless: