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Psychiatric electronic health records in the era of data breaches - What are the ramifications for patients, psychiatrists and healthcare systems?

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Date

Authors

Looi, Jeffrey
Looi, Richard C H
Maguire, Paul
Kisely, Steve
Bastiampillai, Tarun
Allison, Stephen

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Volume Title

Publisher

Sage Publications Inc

Abstract

Objective To update psychiatrists and trainees on the realised risks of electronic health record data breaches. Methods This is a selective narrative review and commentary regarding electronic health record data breaches. Results Recent events such as the Medibank and Australian Clinical Labs data breaches demonstrate the realised risks for electronic health records. If stolen identity data is publicly released, patients and doctors may be subject to blackmail, fraud, identity theft and targeted scams. Medical diagnoses of psychiatric illness and substance use disorder may be released in blackmail attempts. Conclusions Psychiatrists, trainees and their patients need to understand the inevitability of electronic health record data breaches. This understanding should inform a minimised collection of personal information in the health record to avoid exposure of confidential information and identity theft. Governmental regulation of electronic health record privacy and security is needed.

Description

Citation

Source

Australasian Psychiatry

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Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

Creative Commons Attribution licence

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