Staci Hupp reports in the Des Moines Register: First they lost their school. Now students in Russell have been stripped of their privacy, some parents say. Parents allege that school and health records for dozens of students ended up in the trash or on the auction block after crews cleaned out Russell’s only school building….
MI: Workers disciplined for peek at Granholm medical file
Chris Christoff reports in the Free Press: Employees of Sparrow Hospital were fired or disciplined in July after it was discovered they attempted to access computerized medical information about Gov. Jennifer Granholm when she was admitted there for abdominal surgery April 29, the Free Press has learned. Advertisement A hospital spokesman said an unspecified number…
TX: County hospital patient data missing
Liz Austin Peterson of the Houston Chronicle reports: Confidential medical information for about 1,200 Harris County Hospital District patients may have been compromised when an electronic device used to store the data was lost or stolen, district officials said Wednesday. An employee transferred the information onto the device in order to complete a project away…
More UCLA Medical Center employees peeked at celebrities' records, state says
Charles Ornstein reports in the LA Times: […] The California Department of Public Health also found that nearly twice as many medical center employees as had previously been reported peeked at confidential medical records at UCLA. Nearly 60 additional employees gained improper access to records between January 2004 and June 2006, the report said, bringing…
Comments of the World Privacy Forum to the FTC re: Ingenix and Milliman FCRA enforcement action
Some recent articles about the sale of patients’ prescription histories to insurance companies have raised many consumer questions about this practice. Ingenix and Milliman — two companies engaged in this practice — were the subject of a Federal Trade Commission enforcement action which was published for comment in September 2007. The World Privacy Forum provided…
Prescription Data Used To Assess Consumers
Ellen Nakashima reports in the Washington Post: Health and life insurance companies have access to a powerful new tool for evaluating whether to cover individual consumers: a health “credit report” drawn from databases containing prescription drug records on more than 200 million Americans. […] Traditionally, insurance companies have judged an applicant’s risk by gathering medical…