Lacie Morrison reports: While serving warrants on a Mineral Wells resident, law enforcement officers recently recovered identifying information on more than 200 people apparently stolen from a medical records storage facility. […] The paperwork that was discovered with him, however, added an additional charge to the list. According to Mercer, the papers contained information on…
Hospital fires up to 6 for accessing Pressly's files
Jacob Quinn Sanders reports: St. Vincent Health System fired as many as six employees last month for improperly accessing the records of Little Rock morning television anchor Anne Pressly while she was a patient at the company’s main hospital, the chief executive confirmed Wednesday morning. […] Banko declined to name the jobs the employees held….
A third of healthcare professionals leave data security to chance
A transatlantic survey of more than a thousand healthcare professionals has shown that over a third are unwittingly putting personal information at risk by storing patient records, medical images, contact details, corporate data and other sensitive information on mobile devices such as laptops, BlackBerrys and USB sticks – and not adequately securing them. The “mobile…
Should presidential candidates' DNA be public?
Elizabeth Cooney reports: Can you picture a future when some political operative swipes a presidential candidate’s strand of hair, decodes its genetic data, and predicts mental or physical danger based on the analysis? Bioethicist George J. Annas and neurologist Dr. Robert C. Green of Boston University School of Public Health can. Two months before Barack…
CVS says patient privacy charges unfounded
Turner Hutchens reports: CVS Caremark is refuting accusations by a union coalition that it misused patient information and counter-charges the coalition is trying to pressure CVS into supporting “undemocratic†employee organizing tactics. The Change to Win coalition presented the findings of an 18-month investigation in a report titled “CVS Caremark: An Alarming Prescription†Friday. The…
Appeals Court upholds NH drug privacy law
New Hampshire’s attempt to shield doctors’ prescription records from drug companies does not violate the Constitution, the First Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled. In a 148-page ruling made public today, the appeals court overturned a ruling by the state’s U.S. District Court, and found that keeping prescription records confidential does not violate the First…