No Discovery of Patient Records In Federal Employment Case

The U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio found the confidentiality rights of patients outweighed a plaintiff’s need to take discovery of patient medical records in Kapp v. Jewish Hospital, Inc.  Plaintiff, a former nurse, brought suit in the federal court in Ohio, alleging she was terminated in violation of federal employment discrimination laws.  Specifically, plaintiff alleged defendant had alternative motives for plaintiff’s termination, including plaintiff’s age, perceived disability, and plaintiff’s request for FMLA leave.  To establish her case, plaintiff sought to ascertain through the discovery process, whether other similarly situated nurses, were treated in a like manner.  To do so, plaintiff filed a motion to compel seeking access to non-party patient records in an attempt to discern if other nurses participated in essentially the same conduct for which defendant terminated plaintiff, but were not themselves terminated.  The Magistrate Judge denied plaintiff’s motion to compel and held that Ohio's strict physician-patient privilege law applied to prevent production of the records.  The plaintiff objected to the Magistrate Judge’s Order, and those objections were heard by the District Court Judge.  The District Court Judge held that “[a]lthough state privilege law does not control…there are abundant and adequate federal principals that protect patient confidentiality.”  The Court went on to state,

the non-party patients’ right to confidentiality outweighs the plaintiff’s proffered justification for accessing the non-party patient medical records. 

The Court went on to say that the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act expresses a general federal policy favoring patients' right to confidentiality and HIPAA's Privacy Rule grants federal protections for patients' personal health information held by covered entities and gives patients rights regarding that information. In this case, the plaintiff had other, less-intrusive options for discovering whether the hospital treated similarly situated nurses differently, including, for example, narrowing the scope of the request by deposing other nurses who had worked with the physician in question, the hospital's human resources personnel, or other nurse supervisors.

The broad discovery sought by plaintiff in this matter is not an uncommon approach taken by the plaintiff’s bar in an effort to prove the merits of their client’s claims.  Employers, especially those in the healthcare industry, must be aware of opinions like Kapp in their efforts to limit plaintiff’s unfounded discovery requests and to protect their patients privacy.  

Another Hospital Burned for Disclosing Medical Records - State Law Protections Prevail Over HIPAA

In another example of a medical provider facing potential civil liability for providing medical records in response to a subpoena, a federal court in the Northern District of Ohio denied summary judgment for the Cleveland Clinic and other defendants in Turk v. Oiler, No. 09-CV-381 (N. D. Ohio Feb 1, 2010.  We previously discussed the decision in Kim v. St. Elizabeth's Hosp. in which a court allowed similar claims to proceed under an Illinois law protecting mental health records. In Turk, the claims were based in part on the Ohio physician-patient privilege codified at Ohio Rev. Code Section 2317.02.

Plaintiff James Turk was a private investigator accused of possessing a weapon while under a disability in violation of Ohio law.  The Cleveland Clinic received a grand jury subpoena from the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas seeking Turk's medical records. The clinic complied with the subpoena and produced the records. Turk and his wife later brought suit against the clinic claiming damages for invasion of privacy, negligent disclosure of medical records, and violation of the First Amendment.

The clinic moved for summary judgment, arguing that it was required to respond to a grand jury subpoena and that Section 2317.02 was preempted by the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act ("HIPAA").  The federal district court denied the motion and allowed the claims to proceed, reasoning that Ohio law was not preempted by HIPAA where it provided greater protections than the federal law.  The case stands for the proposition that compliance with HIPAA by itself is not enough and reinforces yet again the caution which health care providers must exercise when responding to subpoenas or other requests for medical records without a proper release.