BC nurse suspended for snooping on colleagues' medical records
BC nurse suspended for snooping on colleagues' medical records
A BC nurse who snooped on the medical records of a dozen of his colleagues has been suspended for seven days. According to a July 24 BC College of Nurses and Midwives decision, Vancouver Island registered nurse Martin Lapaire breached privacy rules by peeking at a family member's...
A BC nurse who snooped on the medical records of a dozen of his colleagues has been suspended for seven days.
According to a July 24 BC College of Nurses and Midwives decision, Vancouver Island registered nurse Martin Lapaire breached privacy rules by peeking at a family member's health records and 13 of his co-workers.
The nursing regulator said Lapaire accessed the medical records in June and August 2023 but doesn't say where he worked, only listing him as a Cobble Hill resident.
He signed a consent agreement admitting to his conduct and received a seven-day suspension.
Lapaire can now add his name to an ever-increasing list of nurses disciplined for looking at unauthorized health records.
In the last two years, more than a dozen nurses have been disciplined for the same offence.
In May a Lower Mainland nurse was suspended for two weeks
https://infotel.ca/newsitem/another-bc-nurse-suspended-for-snooping-on-medical-records/it104770
after looking at a "significant" number of medical records without permission.
Other punishments have ranged up to four months for a nurse who showed "no remorse" for breaching people's privacy
https://infotel.ca/newsitem/ih-nurse-showed-no-remorse-for-accessing-patient-records-got-suspended/it100665
and looking at their records.
In late 2022, the former BC Information and Privacy Commissioner Michael McEvoy said that medical records were "disturbingly" vulnerable
https://infotel.ca/newsitem/health-privacy/cp743726126
to being snooped on.
Along with the week-long suspension, Lapaire will also have to take a course on ethics and professionalism and complete a consulting program on standards and guidance.
The nursing regulator says it's satisfied that the terms will protect the public.
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