Koudsi v. Hennepin County Medical Center
This text of 317 N.W.2d 705 (Koudsi v. Hennepin County Medical Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Roma KOUDSI, Respondent,
v.
HENNEPIN COUNTY MEDICAL CENTER, et al., Appellants.
Supreme Court of Minnesota.
Thomas L. Johnson, County Atty., and George H. Elwell, Sr. Asst. County Atty., Minneapolis, for appellants.
Cox & Goudy and Craig A. Goudy, Minneapolis, for respondent.
Heard, considered, and decided by the court en banc.
PETERSON, Justice.
Hennepin County Medical Center (the hospital) appeals from a judgment of $12,500 *706 and attorney fees awarded to respondent Roma Koudsi for alleged violations of her statutory right to privacy. The central issues on appeal are whether the evidence establishes a violation of respondent's rights under the Patients' Bill of Rights, Minn. Stat. 144.651 (1980), or the Data Privacy Act, Minn.Stat. §§ 15.162 .1671 (1978); and, if so, whether the evidence supports the jury verdict of $12,500 for mental anguish. We hold that no statutory violation occurred and accordingly reverse.
Respondent, a 24-year-old mother of two children, was separated from her husband when she became pregnant by another man in July 1977. Because she was attempting a reconciliation with her husband at the time and did not feel capable of raising three children on her own if the reconciliation failed, she decided to keep her pregnancy confidential and to put the baby up for adoption. Respondent, whose weight was such that her pregnancy was not apparent, was able to take her pregnancy to term without the knowledge of her family. On April 15, 1978, when respondent entered the hospital to give birth, her pregnancy was known only to her sister Carol Ebrahim, in whom she had confided, and employees of the Children's Home Society of St. Paul (the society), who had made preparations for the adoption.
Upon entering the hospital, respondent told some of the labor room nurses and the attending physician of her plan to place her baby for adoption. No request for confidentiality was made to those persons. After delivery of a baby boy, respondent was transferred to the hospital's maternity ward. There she talked to at least one licensed practical nurse and the "head nurses" on the floor. Respondent told the licensed practical nurse that she wanted her presence in the hospital kept confidential. When told that the hospital personnel could not deny her presence, respondent said she "did not want any information given out on it."
Respondent's conversations with the head nurses are not so clearly presented in the record. On cross-examination respondent maintained that she told the head nurse on one shift that she did not want information given out. It is possible that by explaining the adoption plan to the head nurses respondent believed she was conveying her desire that information regarding the birth be kept confidential.
The hospital received further notice of respondent's wish for confidentiality through an incident involving the baby's visibility in the nursery. Ebrahim visited respondent shortly after delivery and observed the baby in a prominent location in the nursery, near a window, with a card on the bassinet identifying the baby as "Boy Koudsi." Respondent spoke to a hospital employee about moving the baby to the back of the nursery, explaining that "anyone coming in would have seen it and would have known what was going on."
Respondent was discharged on April 19, 1978. A second sister, Karen Powe, called the hospital on or about April 20, having been told by Ebrahim that respondent was at the hospital for tests related to stomach problems. Patient Information at the hospital disclosed to Powe that respondent had been discharged but that the baby had "stayed behind."
Powe confronted respondent with the information at respondent's home, but she denied giving birth. The next day respondent called the hospital asking about herself, and the hospital again disclosed that a baby had been born. That evening Powe and her husband visited respondent and asked again about the baby. Respondent "broke down and admitted" that she had given birth to a baby boy.
The Powes, who had been married for 10 years and were unable to have children, strongly opposed respondent's decision to place the baby for adoption with the society. After two or three discussions in which respondent was "badgered" to give her baby to the Powes, she became uncertain about her decision and asked the society to return her 1-week-old baby to her. Thereafter, for a period of a week, Powe made daily visits to respondent and the baby. Respondent testified that, at the end of the *707 week, "I decided that trying to decide over again what was the best thing to do, it was just too hard on me and it was too hard on [my sister], so I just decided I'd put an end to it and I let her take him."
The child continues to live with Powe, although not yet legally adopted. Respondent's mother, brothers and sisters, and some of her nieces and nephews know that she is the biological mother of the child. The record contains evidence that certain family relationships have deteriorated since the truth about respondent's pregnancy and attempt to place the child was revealed.[1]
The trial court sent this matter to the jury on February 17, 1981, with instructions to consider respondent's claims under the Data Privacy Act and the Patients' Bill of Rights. The jury was instructed that the statutes each prohibit the disclosure of personal and confidential information by a public hospital. By special verdict, the jury found that the hospital had disclosed personal and confidential information about respondent without her approval. Respondent's damages were set at $12,500.
The Patients' Bill of Rights, Minn.Stat. § 144.651 (1980), is a far-reaching policy statement intended to promote the interests and well-being of the patients and residents of health care facilities. Section 144.651(15) provides: "Every patient and resident shall be assured confidential treatment of his personal and medical records, and may approve or refuse their release to any individual outside the facility, except as otherwise provided by law or a third party payment contract." Without expressing an opinion as to what remedies may be available to patients under section 144.651, we hold that oral disclosure of the information involved here, at a time reasonably contemporaneous with the provision of medical services, does not involve "medical records" and is not covered by section 144.651(15). "Medical records" connotes the storage of information in a form ensuring a degree of permanence. Cf. Minnesota Medical Association v. State, 274 N.W.2d 84, 88 (Minn.1978) (discussing the nature of "public records"). Although information stored in medical records might be orally communicated, not all orally communicated medical information comes from permanent records. Information concerning respondent's discharge and the fact that she had given birth, communicated over the telephone by the hospital's Patient Information operator, does not constitute a violation of the confidentiality of respondent's medical records.
The legislature's heightened concern over medical information stored in permanent records is understandable. The life of the information in such records is "radically and artificially prolonged," because the records are "not subject to the erosions of forgetfulness and the promise of eventual obliteration." Gerety, Redefining Privacy, 12 Harv.C.R.-C.L.L.Rev. 233, 288 (1977).
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317 N.W.2d 705, 1982 Minn. LEXIS 1513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/koudsi-v-hennepin-county-medical-center-minn-1982.