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Home / Hawkes Bay Today

Patient's notes sent to wrong man

By Kaysha Brownlie
Hawkes Bay Today·
21 Jun, 2016 08:39 PM3 mins to read

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A patient received an elderly man's medical notes in the post.

A patient received an elderly man's medical notes in the post.

A Napier man is disgusted after being delivered someone else's medical documents, sparking an internal investigation by the Hawke's Bay District Health Board.

James Lamont, an epileptic aged in his 50s, returned home from Hawke' Bay Hospital on Friday following a three-day stint in the acute unit.

He said his stay had been hampered with things going wrong, which continued when he arrived home.

We have apologised in person to Mr Lamont and have also spoken to the patient whose information he received.

Hawke's Bay District Health Board

An envelope bearing a printed sticker with Mr Lamont's name and address arrived. Flicking through the four pages of medical notes, he suddenly realised they were not his.

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He had been given his discharge notes to take home with him when leaving the hospital, but when he received an elderly man's notes in the post it sparked him to question whether he was due any more personal notes - and if he was, what had happened to them.

"But they can't answer either question," he said. "So I want to know what kind of information was sent to anyone else. If this is through envelope stuffing, you could have a little waterfall going on here."

He said he had not been notified of whether he was to receive further documents or whether the ones he took with him were it.

Mr Lamont said he immediately rang the rightful owner of the sensitive information, who he said was annoyed when he learned what had happened.

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"I said to him, he's lucky I'm a very honest person because if I wasn't then I could've delved into identity theft."

Hawke's Bay District Health Board retrieved the papers on Sunday to return them to the owner.

A board spokeswoman said occasionally a patient's discharge summary could be mailed out after they had left the hospital instead of being given to them at their departure.

She said the health board had apologised to Mr Lamont and the patient whose information he received, and had begun looking into how it could have happened.

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"We have apologised in person to Mr Lamont and have also spoken to the patient whose information he received.

"We understand how important privacy is to our patients and any breach of privacy we take very seriously."

Ironically, the board advised the newspaper to exercise caution while reporting this matter so as not to breach the privacy of the man whose notes were wrongly addressed.

The district health board began looking into the issue during the weekend immediately after being advised of the incident, "so we can fully understand how it happened and put in place any corrective steps to make sure it doesn't happen again".

The former patient said he was told an investigation would begin immediately, but said he had "heard nothing from them".

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