Manx Radio reports: Health and social care bosses say they have to be open-minded amid concerns government data has been leaked. A recording device has been removed from DHSC premises without consent. It’s said to contain taped meetings on children and families. Read more on Manx Radio.
Category: Health Data
Ca: Staff at Nunavut hospital need more training to ensure patients’ privacy protected
Elyse Skura reports: A lack of leadership at the Qikiqtani General Hospital may be putting patients’ personal information at risk, says Nunavut’s Information and Privacy Commissioner. A new privacy audit at the territory’s only hospital revealed that no one is in charge of ensuring staff follow privacy regulations, there’s no standard system to track who is…
Tampa General Hospital settles lawsuit over insider breach for ID theft scheme
For years, Florida has stayed in the headlines because of insider breaches related to identity theft. Not often do you see a lawsuit that prevails or settles, but here’s one where there’s been a settlement. The case is John Doe v. Florida Health Sciences Center Inc. d/b/a Tampa General Hospital, Case No. 14-CA-012657, in the Circuit Court…
Nurse fired after 528 patients’ records breached at Glendale Adventist Medical Center
Jeff Landa reports: A health-care professional at Glendale Adventist Medical Center was fired Wednesday over a privacy breach involving hundreds of patient medical records. Glendale Adventist officials said in a statement on Friday that the protected health information of 528 patients was accessed without authorization by a hospital employee. The unauthorized access included 88 patient…
5,051 records with personal info of Virginia vets discovered in fired ex-Veteran Services employee’s storage unit
There’s a follow-up to a breach first disclosed in October. Mark Bowes reports: More than 5,000 “personally identifiable” records of Virginia veterans – including nearly 700 benefit claims that went unfiled, were filed late or missing key documents – were included in boxes of paperwork discovered in the storage unit of a fired Virginia Department…
The Medical Reports Of 43,000 People, Including HIV Patients, Were Accidentally Released Online
Pranav Dixit reports: The medical records of over 43,000 people have been accidentally made public after being put online by a pathology lab in Mumbai. The reports contain confidential details like names, addresses, dates of birth, and blood test results. They also include details of patients who have had blood tests done for HIV detection….