"The information accessed and reviewed included referral screens, progress notes and reports, free text letters, psychiatric assessments and discharge/transfer summaries," the decision stated.
During this time the practitioner accessed the electronic clinical records of 13 people for personal reasons. She also accessed patients' electronic clinical records with their consent while they were not under her care.
In a separate incident, between March 24 and November 10, 2017, Dr N disclosed health information of a patient to a former friend, breaching the patient's privacy.
"The Practitioner also provided a former friend with photos of two mental health risk assessments concerning a patient.
"This included details such as his date of birth, NHI number, the current risk of suicide and violence, previous diagnoses and proposed management plan."
Between January 1 and November 13, 2017, an audit found Dr N accessed the records of 35 patients when there was no clinical reason for her to have access to the records.
The decision said accessing patient notes became an anxiety-driven compulsion.
"It gave the Practitioner a sense of control and turned the unknown into something more manageable.
"It became a ritual when she was fearful, and she was uncertain if people were who they claimed to be," the decision stated.
During the hearing, Dr N did not dispute the charge or the misconduct.
"The Practitioner's actions undermined patient confidence in the confidentiality of the doctor/patient relationship."
The Tribunal found that each particular charge amounted to malpractice, including ones where patient consent was given.
Dr N has been ordered to pay $30,000.00, alongside an audit of her access to patient records every three months.