Right to Privacy

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   / Right to Privacy #11  

It's HIPAA, Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act.

Anyone who thinks AZ is the primary location for communications analysis is misinformed.
 
   / Right to Privacy #12  
Don't forget the mission creep - even if something does not happen on day one, there is nothing to say it won't later.

I am reminded of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act (RIPA) in UK. It started life controlling government phone bugging - you know, the sort of thing supposed to trap train and plane bombers. Problem is, its scope got widened to allow local councils to (ab)use the powers - like checking dog fouling (that's some creep) or sending children to wrong school.

Analysis: The law with no limits for the snoops | Mail Online

How town hall snoopers hijack anti-terror powers to crack down on dog fouling | Mail Online

I believe your Benjamin Franklin had some apt words.

J
 
   / Right to Privacy #13  
Don't forget the mission creep - even if something does not happen on day one, there is nothing to say it won't later.

I am reminded of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act (RIPA) in UK. It started life controlling government phone bugging - you know, the sort of thing supposed to trap train and plane bombers. Problem is, its scope got widened to allow local councils to (ab)use the powers - like checking dog fouling (that's some creep) or sending children to wrong school.

Analysis: The law with no limits for the snoops | Mail Online

How town hall snoopers hijack anti-terror powers to crack down on dog fouling | Mail Online

I believe your Benjamin Franklin had some apt words.

J


Would it be going out on a limb to characterize it as a "stretch" to associate state sponsored surveillance policies with providing a patient's medical history to their healthcare provider(s)?
 
   / Right to Privacy #14  
The only way ANYONE is going to disappear{or get privacy} is to move into a VERY remote area completely of grid{probably underground}. No credit cards, no bills, no drivers lic, nothing.......as soon as a person walks into a city/town, they're being filmed. If anyone thinks their medical or anything for that matter is private, they just might want to think again????????????
 
   / Right to Privacy #15  
Would it be going out on a limb to characterize it as a "stretch" to associate state sponsored surveillance policies with providing a patient's medical history to their healthcare provider(s)?

The point I was trying to make is that mission creep happens. RIPA is a UK example of how something that starts off on paper as a sound idea evolves and is abused.

To bring it up to date and on-topic, my Doctor has just sent me a letter saying I have to opt-out of what are called Summary Care Records (SCRs) - otherwise my medical history will be loaded onto computer and shared. I guess this is analagous to what the OP is concerned about.

As with RIPA, at the outset it will be limited - in the case of SCRs to healthcare professionals. I intend to opt out nonetheless. RIPA has taught me that these initial promises cannot be relied upon - and I do not want the local council or taxman having access to my healthcare records.

Hope that explains!

J
 
   / Right to Privacy #16  
You have a right to health privacy. You don't have to tell anyone anything ever about your health. You have the right to sit there and die quite anonymously if you like. However, if you enter into an agreement with someone to pay for your health care, that agreement usually specifies that the payer gets to know what they are paying for. Doesn't matter if it is a private company or the government you enter into the agreement with... they get to know what is wrong with your body.

Now how they use that information is another story. Is that what you are asking?
 
   / Right to Privacy #17  
The only way ANYONE is going to disappear{or get privacy} is to move into a VERY remote area completely of grid{probably underground}. No credit cards, no bills, no drivers lic, nothing.......as soon as a person walks into a city/town, they're being filmed. If anyone thinks their medical or anything for that matter is private, they just might want to think again????????????

That's pretty much my impression too.

Going back to the question of right to privacy, is the 4th Amendment the source of the expectation of privacy? Or are other areas of the Constitution involved?

Article [IV]
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.


In the early days of computer data theft, the common laws regarding theft described a 'taking away' of property which deprived the owner of it's use. Of course, that concept doesn't work for the act of stealing data by making an electronic copy. It took a few years for case law to catch up with technology. We are still in that process I think when it comes to the mountains of data recorded about people. Consider the addition of genetic data too, which we would like to think should be private.
Dave.
 
   / Right to Privacy #19  
You have a right to health privacy. You don't have to tell anyone anything ever about your health. You have the right to sit there and die quite anonymously if you like. However, if you enter into an agreement with someone to pay for your health care, that agreement usually specifies that the payer gets to know what they are paying for. Doesn't matter if it is a private company or the government you enter into the agreement with... they get to know what is wrong with your body.

Now how they use that information is another story. Is that what you are asking?

Good Morning Moss,

I have a niggle with your statement someone to pay for your health care.

We do pay for our health care, it's just done in a way that makes it not a very direct payment when using an insurer. Should the fact that our payment is not direct (patient to provider) impact our privacy expectations?

Unfortunately, as soon as the payment is not direct, the doors to fraud are opened. It seems like some of our medical privacy is sacrificed to combat fraud.

I agree 'how they use' is a key question.

Dave.
 
   / Right to Privacy #20  
What bothers me most (can't say I'm scared) is that the universal digitization of health records allows hackers only one target for penetrating and stealing info that might be used against us for everything from identity theft to espionage. How many stories have we heard lately of credit card companies, universities, the VA, military, and banks having their computers compromised by hackers. At least paper records/local records provide some form of security because all the data does not exist in one huge database. I'm just not sure I trust elected officials and civil service personnel enough to put all our "eggs" into their basket. There is no doubt it would have benefits, but do the gains outweigh the dangers? I'm just not sure.:confused:
 
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