Med Students on Twitter, Facebook: No Patient Privacy?
Med Students on Twitter, Facebook: No Patient Privacy?: Via TIME.
Personal profiles on Facebook and other social-networking sites are a trove of inappropriate and embarrassing photographs and discomfiting breaches of confidentiality. You might expect that from your friends and even some colleagues — but what about your doctor?
A new survey of medical-school deans finds that unprofessional conduct on blogs and social-networking sites is common among medical students. Although med students fully understand patient-confidentiality laws and are indoctrinated in the high ethical standards to which their white-coated profession is held, many of them still use Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, Flickr and other sites to depict and discuss lewd behavior and sexual misconduct, make discriminatory statements and discuss patient cases in violation of confidentiality laws, according to the survey, which was published this week in the Journal of the American Medical Association. Of the 80 medical-school deans questioned, 60% reported incidents involving unprofessional postings and 13% admitted to incidents that violated patient privacy. Some offenses led to expulsion from school.
Read Original Article:(Via TIME.)
Recent blog posts
- The Secrecy Double-Standard
- Fully-qualified Nonsense in the SSL Observatory
- Appeals Court Strengthens Warrantless Searches at Border
- Justice Dept. to Congress: Don’t Saddle 4th Amendment on Us
- Feds, RIAA Ask $22,500 in Damages Per Song
- Building a better Certificate Authority (CA) infrastructure
- Where’s EFF? Why EFF Is Sometimes Quiet About Important Cases
- Congressman Wants YouTube Video Covered Up
- Man Creates "Creepy" Stalking App
- Boston College Says Using WiFi Is a Sign of Infringement