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Ontario Superior Court: Insurer on the hook to defend hospital employee in privacy breach lawsuit

Posted on February 22, 2018 by Dissent

Lyle Adriano reports:

The Ontario Superior Court has ruled that an insurance company is obligated to defend a hospital employee against a privacy breach lawsuit by a former patient.

In the case Oliveira v. Aviva Canada Inc., the ex-patient alleged that the employee – who is not involved in providing care to the patient – breached the patient’s privacy by frequently accessing the patient’s medical records without a legitimate reason.

Read more on Insurance Business Canada.


Related:

  • UK: Aviva hit by another insider data theft
  • Small-Scale Violations of Medical Privacy Often Cause the Most Harm
  • Ca: Simcoe nurse suspended by College of Nurses over privacy breach at Norfolk General Hospital
  • UK: Admiral remaining vigilant after Aviva data breach
  • Ca: Insurer must defend hospital nurse sued for breach of privacy: Court
Category: Health DataInsiderNon-U.S.

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