Report slams snooping by Regina health-care workers - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 06:05 AM | Calgary | -12.2°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Saskatchewan

Report slams snooping by Regina health-care workers

Several Regina-area health care workers have been snooping into their co-workers' confidential medical records and in one case altered the records to add "RIP," Saskatchewan's privacy commissioner says.
Gary Dickson, Saskatchewan's information and privacy commissioner, wants stricter rules to deal with how health-care employees access private records. (CBC)

Several Regina-area health care workers have been snooping into their co-workers' confidential medical records and in one case altered the records to add "RIP," Saskatchewan's privacy commissioner says.

Gary Dickson said his office investigated three disturbing cases from 2008 to 2010 where workerscovered by theRegina Qu'Appelle HealthAuthority improperly accessed the health records of other workers.

In one case, an employee at the Regina General Hospital heard that a co-worker had been receiving health services. She looked up the co-worker's records and displayed them on a computer screen while other workers looked over her shoulder.

At the time, no one present suggested there might be something wrong with that, although the worker later confessed to the co-worker.

'Unauthorized viewing of personal health information involving electronic information systems at [the health region] was becoming a chronic issue.' Gary Dickson, Saskatchewan privacy commissioner

In a second case, when a lab employee went into her own medical information, she found that someone had altered her electronic records.

"She discovered that her name, sex, and infectious disease information ... had been changed. Her name was replaced with vulgarities and the acronym 'RIP' appeared in her file," the privacy commissioner's report said.

It was later found that another employee in the health authority had accessed her records seven times.

The third case involved an employee whose husband was involved in a custody dispute with his exwho also worked in the health region.

The ex accessed the employee's medical records for reasons the health regions said "appear to be intentional, malicious and for personal gain."

The casesresulted insuspensions and other disciplinary measures.

In theRegina General Hospital case,a workerwas fired, but she was later rehired after a labour arbitration. In the "RIP" case, the employeeidentified as the culprit was terminated. In the third case, the employee was suspended for 20 days.

Dickson said the three cases seem to point to a widespread problem.

"It appeared to my office that perhaps the unauthorized viewing of personal health information involving electronic information systems at [the health region] was becoming a chronic issue," the report said.

Dickson also said the health authority was generally proactive in looking into the complaints, although it didn't clamp down on what was going on even after being alerted about the first case in 2009.

'Everybody does it', worker says

It appeared there was a culture of "everybody does it" that seemed to be at work in the health region, the report said.

Diane Aldridge, director of compliance for Dickson's office,noted Tuesday that workers who nose around in confidentialfiles could face serious consequences whether or not their intentions are malicious.

"Why they're accessing the information isn't really that important," Aldridge told CBC News. "It's about patient confidence, not only in the electronic health record but in the system itself."

Aldridge echoed Dickson's observation that thebreaches seemed to be commonplace, according to their investigation.

"[An]employee was asked why she looked at the information [and] she said it was curiosity and boredom and everybody does it," Aldridge said.

Dickson is calling for action to make the system more secure and to stop employees from repeating these kinds of intrusions.

For example, health-care workers who log on to a computer and access medical records shouldn't just walk away when they're done, he saysthey must log off so no one else can get into secure areas.

With files from CBC's Stefani Langenegger