SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> Government >> Technology

Unencrypted patient data on memory sticks, warns survey

Unencrypted patient data on memory sticks, warns survey

By:  Leo King  On: 04 Sep 2008 For: Computerworld UK (hs) Creator

A British medical journal reports "worrying" study that doctors aren't following rules to encrypt patient data on USB keys. However, the country's health department says it has given clear orders that patient data has to be protected

LONDON - Doctors are carrying around unencrypted patient data on USB memory sticks, according to stinging research carried out in a London hospital.

But the NHS (National Health Service) maintained it is taking the right steps to protect data, and that clinicians have to follow guidelines that insist on the encryption of identifiable patient data.

In a study conducted in one London hospital, clinicians Sven Putnis and Andrew Bircher found that 92 of 105 doctors surveyed carried memory sticks, Health Service Journal reported. Some 79 of these memory sticks held confidential patient information, but only five doctors had followed NHS rules and encrypted their data.

The authors said the information included patient names and birth dates, alongside x-ray results, diagnoses, and treatment details, journal reported.

Calling the results "worrying", the researchers said there was "no reason why this lack of security would not be mirrored in surveys across every hospital in the U.K. and beyond."

They said data collection and processing had made patient care "more efficient" but that it was important the technology was monitored "to ensure we uphold patients' rights to privacy."

But the NHS hit back at the findings, saying it had issued clear instructions to local trusts that all identifiable patient data on portable devices has to be encrypted.

Dr. Simon Eccles, Medical Director at Connecting for Health, told Computerworld UK that typically patients were assigned codes that meant such records would be unidentifiable to anyone but staff. "[NHS chief executive] David Nicholson quite rightly said that any portable device that contains identifiable information must be encrypted," he said, adding that the NHS is rolling out McAfee Safeboot software across all hospitals to protect the data.

But he added: "At the end of the day, the responsibility for data must rest with the individual clinician." Ideally data should be both unidentifiable and encrypted, he said.

A spokesperson at the Department of Health added: "The NHS locally has legal responsibility to comply with data protection rules."

NHS patients have suffered data losses in recent months. In June, two NHS trusts lost unencrypted laptops containing 31,000 patient records.

Reports of data losses in the NHS have raised concerns over the £12.7 billion (US$22.1 billion) National Programme for IT, which is building a central spine of patient data accessible by NHS staff with a smartcard and passcode. In the summer, analysts said the NHS should urgently reconsider the program, and weigh up the benefits of patients carrying their own data instead.

In August, it emerged that across the public sector, the data of one in every 15 people in the country had been lost in one year alone.


Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 506   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Leo King Leo King is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

Related Content

UK program gives patients access to hospital booking
UK program gives patients access to hospital bookingU.K. National Health Service patients will be able to choose and book outpatient hospital appointments directly using their own PCs or those in local libraries, under a pilot plan launched Wednesday.
Putting Healthcare on the Clock
Putting Healthcare on the ClockPicture an orchestra – not just any orchestra, one made up of classically trained musicians, jazz soloists, traditional pop instrumentalists and a few hip-hop artists thrown in for good measure. Now, imagine you’re the conductor of that orchestra and it’s your job to put on a concert (nothing too difficult – say, Wagner’s Ring Cycle) and make it a hit with all involved: the producers, the critics, the musicians, and of course the concert-going public.
Vendor EHR networks get prime time debut
Vendor EHR networks get prime time debutFour vendors on Tuesday demonstrated electronic health records (EHR) and showed off their prototypes to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' American Health Information Community (AHIC) advisory board.
House, MD and the whiteboard syndrome
in my ongoing efforts to catch up to popular culture, i’ve taken to watching the first season of the tv program

Comments (0)

No Comments!
Name: (required) eMail: (optional)

Your email address will not appear online and will be used only if the editor wishes to contact you personally for additional comments.