Jo Deeks reports: A WOMAN received confidential letters from Addenbrooke’s Hospital in Cambridge containing medical records of other patients. Nicola Marsh was horrified to receive the two letters in one envelope at her home in Haverhill. Read more in Cambridge News Online
Microsoft is lead developer on military PHR project
Peter Buxbaum reports: Microsoft Corp. is the lead developer in a partnership with the Military Health System and Google Inc. to develop a personal health record system for military health care beneficiaries, an MHS spokesman said. An initial version of the system is scheduled to be unveiled in Dec. 2008, according to an MHS blog…
Does personalized genomics pit privacy against ethics?
John Timmer writes: Today’s issue of Nature contains the latest milestone on the road to personal genomics, as researchers are reporting the complete sequencing of the genomes of two more people, one Asian, one Yoruban. The sequencing was done relatively quickly and cheaply using a technique that didn’t even exist when Bill Clinton presided over…
Baylor Health Care says laptop with patient data stolen
Jason Roberson reports: A laptop computer containing limited health information on 100,000 patients was stolen from an employee’s car in September, Baylor Health Care System Inc. said Monday. A letter is being sent to the patients, including 7,400 patients whose Social Security numbers were stored on the computer. […] Baylor is offering a $1,000 reward…
Not-guilty plea in celebrity medical snooping case
A former UCLA Medical Center employee has pleaded not guilty to charges that she sold information from Farrah Fawcett’s medical records to a celebrity gossip tabloid. U.S. attorney’s spokesman Thom Mrozek says Lawanda Jackson entered the plea at her arraignment Monday in U.S. District Court. Source – Associated Press
Some ID-theft schemes target Canada's health-care system
Pauline Tam reports: Criminals are exploiting lax security in government databases to assume false identities and take advantage of Canada’s health-care system, warns a leading expert in identity fraud. But such scams go largely unprosecuted because there is no concerted effort by government agencies to go after bogus health-care claimants, says former Edmonton police detective…