The Manila Times

Princess of Wales’ medical data target of breach try – report

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LONDON: Police have been asked to look into claims that at least one worker attempted to access the confidenti­al medical records of Catherine, Princess of Wales, during her hospitaliz­ation for abdominal surgery, a minister said on Wednesday.

The request follows a report in the Daily Mirror newspaper, which said at least one attempt was made to access the private informatio­n at The London Clinic, a private hospital in the United Kingdom’s capital London.

Catherine, widely known as Kate and whose husband is King Charles 3rd’s elder son Prince William, spent two weeks there in January.

Details of her condition have not been released but her Kensington Palace office previously said it was not cancer-related and that the princess wished her personal medical informatio­n to remain private.

Health Minister Maria Caulfield said the rules on accessing patient informatio­n were “very, very clear.”

“Unless you’re looking after that patient, or unless they’ve given you their consent, you should not be looking at patients’ notes,” she told LBC radio. “My understand­ing is that police have been asked to look at it.”

A statement from London’s Metropolit­an Police said it was “not aware of any referral ... at this time.”

The UK’s data protection watchdog, meanwhile, said it would examine the matter.

“We can confirm that we have received a breach report and are assessing the informatio­n provided,” a spokesman for the Informatio­n Commission­er’s Office said on Tuesday night.

In a statement to the Mirror, The London Clinic said: “We firmly believe that all our patients, no matter their status, deserve total privacy and confidenti­ality regarding their medical informatio­n.”

Catherine was at the center of controvers­y last week after she admitted to editing an official portrait of her and her three children that was released by Buckingham Palace on Mothering Sunday.

It further stoked online speculatio­n about her health and whereabout­s after she had not been seen at a public event since a Christmas Day church service.

Buckingham Palace said in January she would require a lengthy recuperati­on and would not return to royal duties until at least April.

But instead of calming fears over her health, the edited picture sent the rumor mill into overdrive as several newswire agencies pulled the picture from circulatio­n.

Catherine apologized but faced criticism, even from the usually supportive media.

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