U.K. Agency Loses Details On Laptop
July 02, 2008 | by Christopher Nickson
An NHS Trust has managed to lose the details of 21,000 patients, when an unencrypted laptop was stolen from an employee's car.
According to silicon.com, a UK hospital trust, part of the National Health Service (NHS), lost the details on 21,000 patients when an unencrypted laptop was stolen from the car of a trust manager.
The manager has been suspended, even as the trust manager has admitted that the laptop should have been encrypted. The Information Commissioner’s office is investigating to see whether the trust broke the Data Protection Act by failing to encrypt the details.
The patient details included names, post codes, dates of birth and treatment details.
The Trust chief executive wrote to all the patients involved, stating:
"The trust offers all affected patients its sincere apologies for putting their confidential information at risk."
However, he felt there was only a "very small chance that patient details can be accessed" and that "the data will almost certainly by wiped by the thief.”
The Department of Health has said it will take six months to encrypt all their machines.
Post Your Comment...Comments
Comment on this article
Please keep your comments relevant to this article. Email addresses are not displayed, they are only required to verify you are human.
When you submit your comment, an email will be sent to your email address with a confirmation link. Once you have clicked on that confirmation link your comment will be posted.
HTML is not allowed.

Be the first to comment on the article!