Wednesday, February 11, 2026
ADVT 
National

Former Calgary Hospital Worker Charged With Accessing Information On 240 People

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Dec, 2015 11:41 AM
  • Former Calgary Hospital Worker Charged With Accessing Information On 240 People
EDMONTON — A former Calgary hospital worker is facing 26 counts of accessing the health information of more than 200 people.
 
The office of the Information and Privacy Commissioner says it was contacted by Alberta Health Services in October 2014 and then conducted an investigation.
 
Spokesman Scott Sibbald says the results of that investigation were handed over to a Crown prosecutor in Calgary, who then laid the charges under the Health Information Act.
 
The name of the person facing the chargtes has not been released.
 
In October 2014, Alberta Health Services sent out a news release saying an employee in Calgary had inappropriately accessed the personal health information of 240 people.
 
Health Services CEO Vicki Kaminski said at the time that the staff member at Alberta Children's Hospital looked at files belonging to children, adults, physicians, nurses and high-profile people in the community.
 
Kaminski said the employee, who was fired, had no reason to look at the files and there's no indication the person did anything with them.
 
Kaminski said the affected individuals were contacted.
 
The breaches occurred over a 14-month period and were detected during a regular audit of Alberta Health Services patient databases.
 
The files were not restricted to the children's hospital as the employee, whom Kaminski described as a "lower-level" secretary or clerk, had access to other health data bases in the province.
 
"We know that it was inappropriate for them to access," Kaminski said at the time.
 
"We know that they were not part of the circle of care. There was no reason for them to get information on the 240 patients they were looking at. They didn't have to pass that on to anybody. We have no idea what they were going to do with it."
 
If convicted, the maximum penalty for each offence is $50,000.

MORE National ARTICLES

Saskatchewan Firefighters Want Workers' Compensation To Recognize PTSD

REGINA — Saskatchewan firefighters are asking the provincial government to make it easier for them to get treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder.

Saskatchewan Firefighters Want Workers' Compensation To Recognize PTSD

Coroner Links Missing Woman, Human Remains Through Dna In B.C. Cold Case

Coroner Links Missing Woman, Human Remains Through Dna In B.C. Cold Case
 Skeletal remains found nearly nine years ago on an island off British Columbia's Sunshine Coast have been identified through DNA analysis.

Coroner Links Missing Woman, Human Remains Through Dna In B.C. Cold Case

B.C. Legislature Breaks After Child-Welfare, Freedom-of-Information Debates

Fierce debates over child-welfare policies and the government's deletion of potentially sensitive emails dominated the fall legislative session in British Columbia.

B.C. Legislature Breaks After Child-Welfare, Freedom-of-Information Debates

Ancient Giant Wasp Species Discovered By British Columbia Researcher

Ancient Giant Wasp Species Discovered By British Columbia Researcher
Bruce Archibald was searching for fossilized insects in British Columbia's southern Interior when he cracked open a rock and found a beautifully-preserved giant horntail wood-wasp.

Ancient Giant Wasp Species Discovered By British Columbia Researcher

Multiple Probes In Case Of Missing Former Olympic Rower And Funds' Seller Harold Backer

VANCOUVER — At least three investigations are underway in the case of an investment dealer and former Canadian Olympic rower who has gone missing from Victoria.

Multiple Probes In Case Of Missing Former Olympic Rower And Funds' Seller Harold Backer

Report Finds 96 Per Cent Of Canadian Economy No Less Competitive Under Carbon Pricing

Report Finds 96 Per Cent Of Canadian Economy No Less Competitive Under Carbon Pricing
OTTAWA — Canadians may have been told that carbon pricing is a "job-killing tax on everything" but a new study finds the impact rather underwhelming.

Report Finds 96 Per Cent Of Canadian Economy No Less Competitive Under Carbon Pricing