Unsecure faxes put health data of Albertans at risk - Action News
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Unsecure faxes put health data of Albertans at risk

Entering incorrect telephone numbers into fax machines is being blamed for more privacy breaches of personal health information by Alberta Health Services.

Faxes less secure than encrpted email, privacy office says

Entering incorrect telephone numbers into fax machinesis being blamed for more privacy breaches of personal health information by Alberta Health Services.

Brian Hamilton, director of clients and special investigations, says AHS is under no obligation to report privacy breaches. (CBC)

"It's surprising," Brian Hamilton, with the Office of the Alberta Information and Privacy Commissioner, said during an interview. "The health sector in particular, spends millions of dollars on information systems with secure access, and yet people keep faxing."

Sending personal information by fax is a less secure method of transferring information compared to encrypted emails, he said.

Documents obtained by CBC News through access to information show that Alberta Health Services were regularly sending faxesintended forStrathconaHome Careto acustom home builder in Sherwood Park over a two-year period.

The information contained the names of clientsand their health condition.

At one point the builder wasreceiving as many asone fax each week.

'Stop faxing us'

Despite repeated calls,the faxes continued until company owner Dianne Ingram sent AHS a fax of her own.

She scrawled, "You have the wrong fax number!! Stop faxing us!!."

That got the attention of managers at AHS, who discovered the source of the problem an employee inadvertently entering the builder's number into the fax machine, a number one digit offthe number ofStrathcona Home Care.

WhileAHShas strict policies about what can befaxed, people make mistakes, said Dr. VernaYiu, with AHS.

"We do rely on cooperation of the recipient to let us know that, and I would have to say that in general people are pretty co operative about that."

In another example, a wound care plan of a home care client, intended for Boardwalk Centre a downtown Edmonton apartment complex offeringassisted-living suites was faxedto the Sherwood Park companyFlawSpecManufacturing.

The company returned the documents to AHS in an envelope.

In this case, documents reveal the AHS employee was given the incorrect number by the intended recipient, but in neither example didAHS inform the patient their private health care information had been disclosed.

Manager resists revealing breach to patient

Patientsoften go uninformed when their information is disclosed.

The documents show on one occasiona home care manager with AHS resisted informing the patient of a breach,telling her supervisor, "I am not comfortable calling this person and informing them. I have never had to do this before.

"I am not understanding why I would disclose in this case versus the other exact same case I had in the past."

While AHS is not obligated to reportbreaches, Hamilton said his office encourages AHS to inform all patients whose privacy has been breached.

Alberta's information and privacy commissioner Jill Clayton launched an investigation last month into he loss of alaptop containing birth dates, health card numbers and billing codes for620,000Albertans.

It's believed the laptop was either lost or stolen from an EdmontonMedicentrein September of 2013.

Clayton's probe will also include a broader review of how privacy breaches are reported in Alberta.

A CBC investigation earlier revealed personal health care information including care plans and medical conditions of vulnerable home care clients were lostlast summer, because of employee mishaps such as leaving files on top of a car, then driving away.