Dentist called cops when patient asked for pain-killers
Violation of privacy?
Court says no, it's just good citizenship.
A dentist did not violate California’s medical privacy statute by reporting to the San Francisco Police Department that one of its officers, a patient of the dentist, might have a problem with prescription drugs, the First District Court of Appeal ruled yesterday.
Div. Four, in an opinion by Presiding Justice Laurence Kay, affirmed San Francisco Superior Court Judge Thomas J. Mellon’s ruling in favor of the dentist, Jeffrey J. Bertani. The panel agreed that the disclosure was “specifically authorized by law” and was thus not prohibited by the Confidentiality of Medical Information Act.
Officer Ricky Shaddox, a member of the department since 1989, was seen by Bertani in April 1998. When the dentist could not find any source for the pain Shaddox was claiming, he suggested that the officer simply have his teeth cleaned.
Bertani later testified that Shaddox asked for Vicodin, which Bertani would not prescribe. The officer, Bertani told Mellon at the bench trial on the officer’s lawsuit, “gave this icy glare as if he wanted to...beat me up.”
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