Indiana’s attorney general has sued the state’s largest hospital system, claiming it violated patient privacy laws when a doctor publicly shared the story of an Ohio girl who traveled to Indiana for an abortion.
The lawsuit, filed Friday in Indianapolis federal court, marked Attorney General Todd Rokita’s latest attempt to seek disciplinary legal action against Dr. Caitlin Bernard. The doctor’s account of a 10-year-old rape victim traveling to Indiana to receive abortion drugs became a flashpoint in the abortion debate days after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade last summer.
Rokita, a Republican, is stridently anti-abortion and Indiana was the first state to approve abortion restrictions after the court’s decision. The near-total abortion ban recently took effect after legal battles.
“Neither the 10-year-old nor her mother gave the doctor authorization to speak to the media about their case,” the lawsuit stated. “Rather than protecting the patient, the hospital chose to protect the doctor, and itself.”
The lawsuit named Indiana University Health and IU Healthcare Associates. It alleged the hospital system violated HIPAA, the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, and a state law for not protecting the patient’s information.
Indiana’s medical licensing board reprimanded Bernard in May, saying she didn’t abide by privacy laws by talking publicly about the girl’s treatment. It was far short of the medical license suspension that Rokita’s office sought.
Still, the board’s decision received widespread criticism from medical groups and others who called it a move to intimidate doctors.
Hospital system officials have argued that Bernard didn’t violate privacy laws.
“We continue to be disappointed the Indiana Attorney General’s office persists in putting the state’s limited resources toward this matter,” IU Health said in a statement. “We will respond directly to the AG’s office on the filing.”
In July, a 28-year-old man was sentenced to life in prison for the child’s rape.
Sounds like this scum is trying to hide the misery his party’s policies have caused.
That is exactly what it is. Republicans prefer policies based on how they think reality ought to be, rather than how it is, and actively do not want to talk about the misery they cause by doing that, because it shatters the illusion.
Unfortunately, I think it’s worse than that. It seems like he has political aspirations. He’s trying to use the attorney general office to position himself further to the right of everyone else.
It is really gross. It’s just pure greed. Power-hungry greed
What’s nuts is how they can’t see the writing on the wall. Being anti abortion is so unpopular that a liberal judge won a race by +10% in a swing state. These people have completely lost touch with reality.
There’s a reason why red states have been trying to disallow referendums or change rules. Even deep red states vote to keep abortion legal when there’s a referendum.
This one’s already done. He’s trying to send a message for the next one.
Rokita is trying to get into headlines in order to parley that into winning the Republican nomination for governor (which because of Indiana’s political leanings, the GOP nominee will likely win). He is just trying to do stupid shit constantly to drum up outrage in order to make sure HIS name is more well known to more republican voters in the primary than his opponents.
He is literally using a raped 10 year old girl for career advancement, most vilest shit ever. Like not even fucking kidding you cannot make this shit up.
If it isn’t personally identifiable, it doesn’t violate HIPPA. Also a state AG trying to enforce federal law is truly hilarious.
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He just made one up himself. That’s the sort of thing he does.
First of all, many federal statutes authorize state-level enforcement.
Second, information can be personally identifiable without giving away specific information like a name.
Was this rape/abortion ban victim identified specifically by the information the doctor shared?
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ROKITA identified the girl. HE failed the girl’s privacy. And he has received NO blowback for it.
Dr. Bernard did not name her patient.
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Age. Its like if a rare disease enters the hospital, you have to deidentify all data because if there’s only one person with say, a rare infection, and only one person who received a treating medication, there can be a correlation. Her problem will be the identification of age, which would likely allow others working at the institution who should not have access to identify the patient. My guess is she still has a good case, but it’s not open and shut. You’d be surprised how many clinicians say they understand privacy laws and then send an email with PHI the next day.
A patient’s age is not identifiable information.
In your scenario, where a person of a specific age entered the medical system for a rare disease and received a rare medication, does not identify the patient.
The only people who would know that, let’s say a 10 year old had received antibiotics to treat Bubonic plague, would be the child’s medical providers themselves, and they would be aware of far more information then just the patient’s age.
Protected health information has a specific meaning, it has to contain information about patient health/treatment, and contain information that can be used to identify a patient. Someone’s age alone is not an identifier. How many ten year old girls are in driving distance of that hospital?
That’s why case studies are written the way they are. John Doe, age 17, presented to hospital with symptoms of… etc etc, is not identifiable information.
I’ve worked deidentifying data in Healthcare so my experience is Safe Harbor is not the end all be all (in my industry anyway). You have to remove outliers of less than a certain threshold, even if it’s based on one data point (abortion plus age (year only but outlier) plus which hospital). This applied to deidentifying for private and government sectors. Glad to hear she likely had representation prior (from the other response).
In your example, John Doe was one of many without outlier, unless they were risking it (if they gave the hospital).
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Thanks for the additional context from Indiana specifically. I’ve worked deidentifying data in Healthcare so my experience is Safe Harbor is not the end all be all (in my industry anyway). You have to remove outliers of less than a certain threshold, even if it’s based on one data point (abortion plus age (year only but outlier) plus which hospital). This applied to deidentifying for private and government sectors. Glad to hear she likely had representation prior.
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Remember everyone:
Todd Rokita is mad that a 10 year old rape victim who was pregnant could get an abortion in his state because she couldn’t get one in her own.
Yep. He’s not trying to protect a little girl in a bad situation. He’s trying to punish her doctor for treating her.
Rokita is so fucking obsessed. And he doesn’t give a shit about Indiana.
I have to live in this fucking state, so I’ve been aware of his base-pandering bullshit for a long time. It’s literally all he does.
It’s like these people watched or read Handmaid’s Tale and thought it was worthy of implementing…
Conservatives being mad again that 10 year old girls can’t be forced to give birth to the babies of rapists. You heard that right
This is the best summary I could come up with:
The lawsuit, filed Friday in Indianapolis federal court, marked Attorney General Todd Rokita’s latest attempt to seek disciplinary legal action against Dr. Caitlin Bernard.
Rokita, a Republican, is stridently anti-abortion and Indiana was the first state to approve abortion restrictions after the court’s decision.
It alleged the hospital system violated HIPAA, the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, and a state law for not protecting the patient’s information.
Indiana’s medical licensing board reprimanded Bernard in May, saying she didn’t abide by privacy laws by talking publicly about the girl’s treatment.
Still, the board’s decision received widespread criticism from medical groups and others who called it a move to intimidate doctors.
“We continue to be disappointed the Indiana Attorney General’s office persists in putting the state’s limited resources toward this matter,” IU Health said in a statement.
The original article contains 313 words, the summary contains 137 words. Saved 56%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
Thank you for this article. I remember hearing the argument that she couldn’t have been raped because there were no charges. I’m glad the guy was caught and sentenced to life.
No standing. Case will tossed.