Departed US doctor complains his patient list was used for marketing by former employer

Departed US doctor complains his patient list was used for marketing by former employer

The Columbia Tribune is reporting a doctor's allegations that, after he left his hospital practice, his former employer passed his patient list to an external company to market services to them:

Doctor hears from patients who say university broke law
:

"...That's why he decided to leave to start a private practice. King thought he was leaving on good terms with no hard feelings. Then he started hearing from his patients.

King was shocked when he found out what had happened. His former boss, Kevin Dellsperger, chairman of internal medicine, had given a list of about 800 of King's former patients, along with their phone numbers, to a home-health-care provider from Cape Girardeau. A woman from the company had been calling the patients, King says, trying to sell home health-care services, including a $3,000-a-month drug that he says many of the patients didn't need.

'She was making cold calls, asking people about their hepatitis C,' he says. 'Most of the people on the list have hepatitis C. Not all of them do. I got a call from one lady frantic over the phone call. "I don't have hepatitis C," she told me. "What's this all about?" Whoever was making the calls had no way of knowing if these people were sick, if they have cirrhosis, if they're still using. She's just making phone calls to get people on treatment. That is scary.'

It's also, King believes, a clear violation of the recently enacted federal privacy law, the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, or HIPA [sic HIPAA]. The law severely restricts hospitals' and doctors' ability to share private information about patients, including names and phone numbers, without consent from the patient. There are specific rules that guide the use of information for marketing, unless the other medical party already has some relationship to the patient.

What complicates the privacy concern in this case is the nature of hepatitis C patients. Most, King says, are middle-age folks who contracted the disease from youthful indiscretions in the 1960s and '70s. Some got it from blood exposure or bad needles, possibly from drug use, others got it from bad blood transfusions before 1990 when procedures were improved....

0 comments:

Post a Comment

  • Health Care Reform Explained from B... Dan Roam at the Back of the Napkin Blog sums up the current health care reform effort in this four part health care series, Healthcare Napkins All. Great back of the...
  • Why We Need A Health Care Revolutio... Dr. Val Jones' road to revolution provides her personal perspective on the current state of our health care system and why we all need to work for change.Don't miss the...
  • The important lesson from sandcastl... As I return to West Virginia after a week spent at the beach -- this post by Jim Carrol, Futurist, Trends & Innovation Expert, caught my attention. Much of my week on...
  • A little Nick: I'm a liberal an... Law blogger posts online: Don't miss reading this post by my favorite hospital blogging CEO, Nick Jacobs over at Nick's Blog. Much of what Nick has to say strikes a chord with me and this post is...
  • Executive Order Impacts Health Care... Law blogger posts online: President Bush signed an Executive Order on August 22 requiring federal agencies to do more to inform public health care consumers about the cost and quality of health...
  • eHealthWV: West Virginia EHR Public... Law blogger posts online: As a part of West Virginia's participation in the Health Information Security and Privacy Collaborative (HISPC), West Virginia Medical Institute and its partners launch...
  • Physicians vs. Patient: Rating-Perm... Interesting post from the WSJ Health Blog on Medical Justice's new ratings-permission contracts (press release on service).This new service offered by Medical Justice...
  • Just when you thought it was safe: ... Law blogger posts online: I’ve blogged previously about just how much I hate browser toolbars and nothing much has changed in the four years that have passed. Call me nosey, but when I’m...
  • Governor Manchin Approves Cardiac C...The West Virginia Health Care Authority website indicates today that Governor Manchin approved the final revised certificate of need Cardiac Catheterization Standards.
  • A Law Actually Interview with… Litt... Next up in the interview chair is Gemma from Little Tiny Pieces. Little Tiny Pieces is an interesting name?  What it inspired it; does it have any hidden meanings?...
  • Let the voting commence!... Law blogger posts online: Yes, after two long weeks of nominations, the shortlist for the 2010 Blawggies has been decided and voting for the awards can officially begin! The polls will remain...
  • Is blogging good for your health?... Law blogger posts online: Is blogging good for your health?This Boston Globe article, Cancer blogs become part of treatment, indicates that blogging about your condition has a positive impact.The...
  • ADVANCE Magazine - Article on EHRs ... Recently I was interviewed for an article looking at the legal issues involved in the developing world of EHRs and PHRs written by Beth Walsh for ADVANCE Magazine. The...