Privacy Concerns with Health Care Providers’ Use of Personal Devices for Medical Images

Privacy Concerns with Health Care Providers’ Use of Personal Devices for Medical Images

By: Deirdre Sullivan

Last year I had to go to urgent care for a second degree burn on my chest after spilling boiling hot tea on myself. I was surprised when the provider took a photo of my burn, in a relatively sensitive area, with her own cell phone to upload to the medical file. Seeing my surprise, she assured me that this was through a secure application and the photo of my chest was not actually stored on her phone.

 

The following week, my primary care provider did the same thing to continue tracking the burn’s progress. I also expressed the same concerns, and she went further by showing me that the photo was not stored on her camera roll.

 

While I trusted these two female providers, I was still skeptical and imagined all the ways that this could go wrong for a patient. The practice of using personal devices for imaging is ripe for abuse, and this blog post will explore potential harms to patients as well as liability for health care providers.

 

Patients have a reasonable expectation of privacy in their images not being shared past what is necessary to provide care, and it is without dispute that the practice of using personal devices to photograph patients violates this. There is a tension here between what is best for the privacy interests of the patient being photographed, and the business needs of the healthcare entity in reducing the cost of having devices on hand for providers while also increasing access to devices for taking pictures to document injuries in the medical file or for sharing with other providers for consult.

 

First, there are two different possibilities for how the image could be captured and stored on a provider’s cell phone. The provider could directly take the image without the use of a secure app to store on their phone for purposes of a consult with another provider, or the provider could deceptively take an image under the guise of just using a secure app and then hide it from their patient. This could easily happen by a provider switching between a secure healthcare app and their own camera app to take a photo, and then hiding that from the patient by showing them the last photo from an album, rather than the last photo of their camera roll. Or even a provider taking a screenshot of a sensitive photo on the secure app.

 

In either scenario it would be extremely difficult for the patient to catch the violation of their privacy. Most often these photos are not of faces, making it difficult to identify and track once the photo makes it off the provider’s phone either by intentional sharing, or the phone being stolen or hacked. Further, patients are at a disadvantage and may not know to worry about improper photos being taken or that sensitive photos are stored on their provider’s phone and distributed to other persons.

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