It appears that celebrity comes itself with more than fame. It
brings paparazzi trouble, which makes you watch all your moves for fear you
would appear in an “unexpected” hypostasis on a newspaper. Now, celebrities
have to be careful about their medical records, hospitals they check themselves
in and doctors they see as well.
For example, an investigation by the California Department
of Public Health revealed that the privacy of dozens of Hollywood celebrities has
been breached by 127 trusted employees at a group of Los Angeles hospitals.
In California,
the privacy of medical records is protected under the state and federal laws
and the person who does such things risks her freedom or to pay fines or both.
According to the findings of the investigation, staff at the
UCLA Medical Center used their administrative computer system to access the
medical records of celebrity patients, including Farrah Fawcett, Britney Spears,
Mariah Carey, actors Tom Cruise and Dom DeLuise, Arnold Schwarzenegger’s
wife, Maria Shriver and many more, some of them being unfortunate enough to
find significant information from their files on different tabloids across the
country.
Such an intrusive behavior continued even after Lawanda
Jackson’s case became public. She was a former hospital worker, arrested and
charged in early April with receiving $4,600 from an unidentified media outlet for
leaking information about a patient, identified later as being Farrah Fawcett. Jackson declared herself
just “being nosy” at the time and denied that she had received money for the “leaking”
information. According to the report, she looked at the records of 939 patients
“without any legitimate reason” from April 2003 to May 2007, including Social
Security numbers.
“It was more of a curiosity. It was just me being nosy…It
wasn’t to do anything to anybody. I don’t even remember half the stud I even
looked at. There was no intent to do anything bad,” Jackson
said in April.
Jackson
had worked at the hospital for 32 years, until last year, when she was fired
due to her “curiosity,” which exposed the UCLA to a major embarrassment for
one of the nation’s preeminent medical centers.
Now with the new report, the situation is even worse. “What we’re
seeing here is a clear pattern of repeated violations of patient medical
records and patient confidentiality by UCLA. It is absolutely unacceptable,” Kim
Belshe, secretary of the state’s Health and Human Services Agency said.
Following the results of the investigation, Dr. David
Feinberg, chief executive of the UCLA Health System said “all other employees
who were found to have violated patient confidentiality during our review have
been disciplined, including some who have been terminated.” He further
apologized for “this failure, and the personal distress these breaches may have
caused.”
Maybe the new legislation proposed by Arnold Schwarzenegger,
California’s Governor
(to impose financial penalties on hospitals whose employees breach
confidentiality) would change something about this issue.
Back in April, Mr. Schwarzenegger said he was a victim of
this kind of behavior in “his hospital visits” as well, naming the incident “outrageous.
Patients’ medical records should be private-period. No one should have to worry
that an unauthorized person is reviewing their private medical records,” he
said in a statement.