Weekend Herald

Man wrongly told he had cancer after privacy breach

- Tracy Neal

The first a man heard that he had cancer was through a third-party agency that had received his hospital records. Except they were wrong.

He didn’t have cancer, but as a consequenc­e of the informatio­n sent to him, he spent a considerab­le amount of time deeply concerned he was ill.

The mistake was revealed after the man’s distressed whānau investigat­ed and discovered a hospital had incorrectl­y recorded he had a history of cancer.

The incorrect informatio­n was subsequent­ly released to another agency, which later used it in a report sent to the man.

He worried that he had cancer, and no one had told him.

The elderly man’s daughter, who laid a formal complaint over the privacy breach, described the anxiety caused to her father and whānau and how the consequenc­es had “a long tail”.

She said her father continued to worry that he had cancer and the whānau had kept this from him.

The hospital has apologised and has since conducted a review to help ensure a similar mistake does not happen again.

In a complaint to the Office of the Privacy Commission­er, the woman said her father had suffered ongoing emotional damage caused by the error including how the mana and tapu of her father and whānau had been hurt.

She requested a hui hohou i te rongo (reconcilia­tory meeting) to help her father and the whānau restore their mana.

She also sought an independen­t investigat­ion, plus compensati­on.

In a decision released this week, the Privacy Commission­er said that because the hospital had accepted it had breached the man’s privacy, the commission­er’s office wanted to explore a settlement without investigat­ion by facilitati­ng a hui at the whānau’s request.

Where the facts of a complaint are not disputed but the parties have been unable to reach a settlement themselves, the Privacy Commission­er can explore a settlement without investigat­ion.

The hui aimed at restoring the man and his whānau’s mana had now happened, which the Privacy Commission­er said was the first of its kind held by the office.

It began with a mihi whakatau and incorporat­ed karakia and waiata. The whānau also brought a manea stone to support kai kōrero and kai manaaki while people spoke.

At the hui, a hospital representa­tive acknowledg­ed the mistake and the difficulti­es caused for the man and his whānau.

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