We care about you and your data. We do our best to manage the process of serving you, respecting your choices and providing the best experience we can.
It is helpful to understand what your rights are.
So what are your data protection rights under General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)
For people residing in the European Economic Area (EEA), there are data protection rights you have:
The right to access – So you can request copies of your personal information or data. If we hold any it may take us sometime to collate it. We may charge you a small fee, to cover our time, to provide you this information.
The right to rectification – We have no interest in data that is incorrect and you have the right to request we correct, any personal information that might be inaccurate. Additionally, you the right to ask us to ensure any information we hold on you is complete, if you feel it is incomplete.
The right to erasure – You can ask us to erase any personal data we may hold, under certain conditions. We may legally have to retain accounting records, so some data can’t be deleted.
The right to restrict processing – You also can request that we limit or restrict the processing of your data, under certain conditions.
The right to object to processing – You can also object to our processing of your personal data and information, under certain conditions.
The right to data portability – You can request that we transfer information or data, collected by us, to another organisation, or even directly to you, under certain conditions.
Time
Any requests you may will take time to respond to and support you on. We have a month to respond and come back to you. In addition, we may ask to verify your identity, before answering your requests. If you want to exercise these rights, then please get in contact with us at email: orders@natalhypnotherapy.co.uk
You also have the right to file a complaint to a Data Protection Authority, should you wish, about our collection and use of your Personal Data or information. If you would like more information on this, then please contact your local data protection authority in the European Economic Area (EEA). You can get information on Data Protection in the UK here, click to read more about the data protection legislation.