Denise Hnytka reports: The Wichita Radiological Group received an anonymous call saying their patient records may have been stolen. On Monday, the executive director reported the information to Wichita police. According to the police report, the caller claims a former employee stole patient records before being fired from the Wichita Radiological Group. The caller said…
UK: Surgery loses patient data tape
The BBC reports: A tape containing the records of more than 11,000 patients has been lost by a GP practice in Greater Manchester. The magnetic tape contains duplicates of current and old patient details at Whitaker Lane Practice in Prestwich. Doctors say the records can only be viewed using specialist equipment and are unlikely to…
Breach in Florida donor registry may have exposed IDs
Carly Timmons of ABC reports: State health officials say a security breach in the Organ and Tissue Donor Registry may have exposed thousands of donors’ personal information, including their social security numbers. The Agency for Health Care Administrations said Monday it has corrected the flaw, which may have allowed unauthorized users to view the personal…
ID fraud reported at hospital
Officials at South Coast Medical Center are still trying to figure out how a woman was admitted under a 72-hour psychiatric hold using another woman’s identity — and insurance card. […] Kofl said it is the first known incident of insurance identity theft in the Adventist Health chain of 18 hospitals. Full story – Coastline…
UK: NHS chiefs apologise
HEALTH bosses have apologised after the names and addresses of patients were stolen from a nurse’s car. The details of 233 patients in Rutland and Leicestershire were taken. The information included names and addresses of GP practices and the patients’ NHS reference numbers. The theft came as Peterborough and Stamford Hospitals NHS Trust said it…
UK: Data amnesty after files go missing
Health bosses have ordered a data amnesty after an employee lost personal information of 137 patients. NHS Lothian launched the campaign to ensure all 28,000 staff understand the rules on storing sensitive data – and own up if they lost files themselves. More – The Press Association