Hospital Workers Fired for Snooping in Britney Spears' Records
UCLA Medical Center is taking steps to fire at least 13 employees and has suspended at least six others for snooping in the confidential medical records of Britney Spears. An additional six physicians also face discipline for peeking at her computerized records. This is a violation of HIPAA, which even though it is an incredibly confusing and poorly written law, (I deal with it on a daily basis), is quite clear that this is not kosher.
Questioned about the breaches, officials acknowledged that it was not the first time UCLA had disciplined workers for looking at Spears' records. Several workers were caught snooping after Spears gave birth to her first son, Sean Preston, in September 2005 at Santa Monica-UCLA Medical Center and Orthopaedic Hospital, officials said. Some were fired.
It's not only surprising, it's very frustrating and it's very disappointing," said Jeri Simpson, the Santa Monica hospital's director of human resources, who handled the discipline in the first instance. "I feel like we do everything that we possibly can to ensure the privacy of our patients and I know we feel horrible that it happened again." Simpson said UCLA treats celebrities "all the time and you never hear about this." "I don't know what it is about this particular person, I don't know what it is about her," she added, referring to Spears.
Klove declined to discuss specifics of the most recent breaches today, saying they involved confidential patient and personnel matters. "We regularly monitor access to patient records, and in the event of an inappropriate access, we will investigate it, and if a violation is found, we will take appropriate action which can include termination."
Hoping to head off such snooping, UCLA officials had sent a memo the morning Spears was hospitalized on Jan. 31, warning employees that they were not allowed to peruse records unless directly caring for a patient. "Each member of our workforce, which includes our physicians, faculty, employees, volunteers and students, is responsible to ensure that medical information is only accessed as required for treatment, for facilitating payment of a claim, or for supporting our healthcare operations," chief compliance and privacy officer Carole A. Klove wrote in an e-mail to all employees. "Please remember that any unauthorized access by a workforce member will be subject to disciplinary action, which could include termination."
Even Britney is entitled to some privacy.




Geez... Don't they know they're supposed to look over the shoulder of someone who is authorized to look instead of looking themselves?
Posted by: Nic | March 17, 2008 at 12:29 PM
This is all just such a train wreck of despair.
Posted by: jenB | March 18, 2008 at 02:34 AM
You would think people would have learned by now. Man oh man. And jodifur, when will they fix HIPAA? Never? We are so strict about it because it's so vague... Such a pain.
Posted by: BaltimoreGal | March 18, 2008 at 10:04 AM
Baltimoregal-HIPAA is the worst written law, EVER! I spend hours arguing with other legal professionals about what it means. I don't even think the people who wrote it know what it means.
Posted by: jodifur | March 20, 2008 at 09:40 PM