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张琨 发表于 2008-3-22 07:53

UCLA大学医院禁止使用手机和笔记本电脑

一看题目吓一跳,以为他们发现GSM信号或者wifi信号对医疗设备有影响,原来是为保护患者隐私。
UCLA hospital bans cellphones, laptops
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The school's Resnick neuropsychiatric hospital acts to guard privacy after a patient posted photos of others on the Web.
By Charles Ornstein, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
March 18, 2008
UCLA's neuropsychiatric hospital has banned all cellphones and laptop computers after a patient posted group photos of other patients on a social networking website, officials confirmed Monday.

Dr. Thomas Strouse, medical director of the Resnick Neuropsychiatric Hospital, said in a statement that the decision was part of "UCLA Health System's ongoing efforts to enhance patient privacy and confidentiality in compliance with California's patient rights law."

Separately, The Times reported last week that UCLA was taking steps to fire at least 13 workers and had suspended six others for inappropriately snooping in the electronic medical records of pop star Britney Spears while she was a patient in the neuropsychiatric hospital. In addition, six doctors were being disciplined. (Those slated to be fired did not look at records from Spears' psychiatric stay but rather from her prior visits to UCLA.)

Spears was not featured in the photos posted online.

UCLA spokeswoman Dale Tate said the hospital became aware of the posted photos coincidentally from a nurse's family member. The patients apparently all gave their consent to be photographed, Tate said.

"I was concerned about the potential covert use of such cameras, without the consent of those being photographed, or under circumstances where someone's agreement to be photographed might not be well-reasoned or fully competent," Strouse said in the statement.

Patients continue to have access to conventional telephones in the hospital, and Strouse said their ability to keep in touch with family and friends should not be affected.

In a March 3 memo announcing the ban, Strouse wrote that he did not want to ask staff members to check whether cellphones or laptops had cameras, so he decided to ban them all.

Other hospitals have banned cellphone cameras as well. Rady Children's Hospital in San Diego forbade employees from carrying cellphones in patient-care areas after investigators found images of children, taken at the hospital, on a respiratory therapist's computer and cellphone. The therapist later pleaded guilty to child molestation and exhibiting a minor in pornography. Visitors can have cellphones, but "if they're using the camera feature on their cellphones, they're only allowed to take pictures of their child and nobody else," hospital spokesman Ben Metcalf said.

Officials at the California Hospital Assn. said they are hearing more and more hospitals express concern over how to deal with cellphone cameras. "There's been a heightened awareness of the problem for the past year or two," said Lois Richardson, the group's vice president and legal counsel. "However, I haven't seen any hospitals that have been able to come up with a good, workable tactical solution to the problem."

uchinaboy 发表于 2008-3-23 18:51

7. Cellphones create considerable electromagnetic interference in hospitals.(it's not real)

Anecdotal reports persist that cellphones create false alarms on monitors and malfunctions in infusion pumps. After publication of a medical journal article citing more than 100 reports of suspected electromagnetic interference with medical devices before 1993, The Wall Street Journal published a front page article on the topic. As a result, many hospitals banned the use of cellphones, perpetuating the belief.
But the study authors found no evidence to support it. At the Mayo Clinic in 2005, in 510 tests performed with 16 medical devices and six mobile phones, the incidence of clinically important interference was 1.2 percent. A 2007 study that examined cellphones “used in a normal way” found no interference of any kind during 300 tests in 75 treatment rooms. In contrast, a large survey of anesthesiologists found that use of cellphones by doctors was associated with a 22 percent reduction in medical error resulting from delays in communication.

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