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Worker punished over Fawcett’s records
Raquel Maria
LOS ANGELES—UCLA Medical Centre has disciplined an employee for snooping
in Farrah Fawcett’s medical records, the hospital said Wednesday, a few
weeks after announcing that several employees were fired for taking
peeks at Britney Spears’ files. Fawcett expressed concern to a doctor in
May that details of her condition were being leaked to tabloids, and he
reported it to hospital executives, UCLA spokeswoman Roxanne Moster
said.
Fawcett’s attorney, Kim Swartz, said an employee at the hospital
accessed Fawcett’s medical records without authorization, and details
about her cancer treatment later showed up in the National Enquirer. The
tabloid published details about a recurrence in Fawcett’s cancer before
she had a chance to tell family and friends, Swartz said. “She’s a very
private person and she’s reluctant to go public about this, let alone
take legal action,” Swartz said. “She’s fighting for her life.”
The Los Angeles Times reported on its Web site Wednesday that hospital
officials fired an employee who reviewed Fawcett’s records without
authorization. The UCLA spokeswoman would not confirm a firing and would
not specify the disciplinary action.
Moster said the hospital requires all staff to complete training on
patient privacy issues and sign confidentiality agreements. Doctors
declared Fawcett, 61, cancer-free in February 2007, but her cancer
returned a few months later.
“It’s disturbing to her when there are false reports that she’s given up
and wants to die, when the opposite is true,” said Swartz. “She’s a
strong person and a fighter.” Enquirer senior reporter Alan Smith told
the Times that Fawcett’s cancer is newsworthy.
“We publish what we believe is accurate,” he said. The 1970s television
icon is currently being treated for cancer in Germany.
“She is cautiously optimistic,” Craig J. Nevius told the Times. Nevius
is producing a documentary about the former star of “Charlie’s Angels”
and her battle with cancer. “Farrah has learned the hard way that with
cancer, the test is time. At the moment she has no detectable cancer,”
he said.
Last month, UCLA Medical Center announced the firing of 13 workers and
disciplined several others for snooping into Spears’ records. The
California Department of Public Health launched an inquiry into UCLA’s
handling of Fawcett’s files, just as it had after the Spears incident,
the Times reported. It was the second time that Fawcett’s privacy had
been breached at UCLA, according to the Times. |