UK assessing if Kate’s med files were breached
LONDON (Reuters) – Britain’s data watchdog says it is looking into a report that staff at the hospital where Kate, Princess of Wales, underwent abdominal surgery in January had attempted to access her private health records.
The report in the Daily Mirror said managers at the London Clinic, where King Charles was also treated in January, were investigating claims that at least one staff member had been caught trying to access Kate’s medical notes.
A representative of the Information Commissioner’s Office said on Wednesday: “We can confirm that we have received a breach report and are assessing the information provided.”
Kate, 42, had surgery for a noncancerous but unspecified condition during her stay of around two weeks in the hospital.
The London Clinic said in a statement regarding the media coverage that all its staff were acutely aware of their ethical and legal duties in regard to patient confidentiality.
“We have systems in place to monitor management of patient information and, in the case of any breach, all appropriate investigatory, regulatory and disciplinary steps will be taken,” chief executive Al Russell said in a statement.
Kate stepped back from official duties, and Kensington Palace has said she is not expected to return to royal engagements until after Easter.
Any confidentiality breach of the Princess’s health records was “a matter for the London Clinic,” her office said.
Kate’s absence from public life has triggered speculation, rumor, and bizarre conspiracy theories about her health.
Kate’s apology earlier this month for editing a photo taken by her husband, William, the heir to the throne, to mark Mother’s Day only sparked further intrigue.
On Monday, however, video published by the newspaper on its website showed her walking and carrying shopping bags alongside William at a farm shop in Windsor, near their home.
Kensington Palace has not denied that the video is genuine, but it has declined to comment on a matter it regards as being the royals’ private time.