B.C. health workers breached privacy of injured victims of Vancouver festival attack
VICTORIA — British Columbia health care workers unlawfully accessed highly sensitive personal information on victims of Vancouver’s Lapu Lapu Day festival attack mostly out of “curiosity,” the province’s privacy commission says.
A report released by the Office of the Information and Privacy Commissioner said it was notified of privacy breaches within days of the deadly attack, and an investigation found 71 instances of unlawful “snooping” on 16 victims’ medical records.
The report found 35 workers at B.C. health authorities engaged in the snooping, as well as one worker at a doctor’s office who had access to Fraser Health’s electronic medical records system.
All the employees who were implicated in the snooping incidents were disciplined by their employers, including some who were terminated, although the report said most received suspensions, while some were sent “letters of expectation.”











