Charles Ornstein reports in the Los Angeles Times: Months before UCLA Medical Center caught its staffers snooping in the medical records of pop star Britney Spears, ’70s TV icon Farrah Fawcett learned that a hospital employee had surreptitiously gone through records of her cancer treatments there, documents and interviews show. Fawcett’s lawyers said they are…
Patient Privacy (letter)
Jill Callahan Dennis of the American Health Information Management Association has a letter to the editor of the New York Times: “Safeguarding Private Medical Data†(editorial, March 26) makes an important point about the need for identifiable patient information to be better protected from security and confidentiality breaches. Not all organizations are subject to privacy…
Ca: Alberta Health and Wellness, Nor-Don Collection Network
The Office of the Information and Privacy Commissioner of Alberta has issued another opinion: Summary: The Complainant complained that Nor-Don Collection Network (Nor-Don) had disclosed his health information to his spouse contrary to the Health Information Act (HIA) during a telephone call. In the alternative, he complained that Nor-Don had disclosed his personal information to…
How to engender a false sense of security in patients
In the story about the new Canadian health portal, mydoctor.ca, it says: […] [Larry Mohr, president of Practice Solutions] was asked how the system could guarantee patients’ health information doesn’t end up in the public domain. “The piece that people might get most nervous about would be the secure messaging where people would normally think…
Canadian Medical Association launches new online system for patients
 The Canadian Press reports: The Canadian Medical Association launched a new online pilot project Tuesday it says will help patients take a more active role in their health. “It empowers patients,” said Brian Day, the president of the Canadian Medical Association. The new online “tool” was introduced by Day at a news conference and later…
Virginia Beach nurse charged with stealing dead man's credit card
Aaron Applegate of The Virginian-Pilot reports: An unconscious man was spotted last week in the parking lot of a BJ’s Wholesale Club. He was taken to Sentara Bayside Hospital and pronounced dead. Six hours later, a man in hospital scrubs used the dead man’s credit card at Best Buy to buy a laptop computer, police…