The Day

Court: Yes, there is doctorpati­ent confidenti­ality

- By DAVE COLLINS

Hartford — Connecticu­t’s highest court ruled Thursday on an issue that most people may think is already settled, saying doctors have a duty to keep patients’ medical records confidenti­al and can be sued if they don’t.

The Supreme Court’s 6-0 decision overturned the ruling of a lower court judge who said Connecticu­t had yet to recognize doctor-patient confidenti­ality.

The high court’s ruling reinstated a lawsuit by former New Canaan resident Emily Byrne against the Avery Center for Obstetrics & Gynecology in Westport.

“It’s particular­ly important for not only my client but for all patients receiving medical care in Connecticu­t,” Byrne’s lawyer, Bruce Elstein, said. “This case has establishe­d for the first time that there’s a duty of confidenti­ality . ... That’s groundbrea­king.”

Byrne, who now lives in Montpelier, Vermont, alleges the doctor’s office, without her permission and without warning, sent her medical file to a probate court in New Haven in 2005 under a subpoena issued by an attorney for her child’s father. She alleges the father was then able to look at her medical file and use the highly personal informatio­n to harass, threaten and humiliate her, including filing seven lawsuits and threatenin­g to file criminal complaints.

The father had subpoenaed the medical file in a paternity case.

Byrne sued the Avery Center in 2007 for alleged negligence in failing to protect her medical file, infliction of emotional distress and failing to follow state and federal medical privacy laws. But state Judge Richard Arnold in Bridgeport dismissed her claims in 2015.

Arnold ruled that Connecticu­t law, unlike laws in many other states, had yet to recognize a duty of confidenti­ality between doctors and their patients, or that communicat­ions between patients and health care providers are privileged under common law.

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