Beware of hospitals asking for your palm print
Don’t do it! Nor is the palm scan mandatory; it’s purely optional. But they won’t volunteer that information unless you ask.
Natasha Singer reports for the New York Times, Nov. 10, 2012, that she was told they needed to scan her palm “for her file” when she recently visited a doctor’s office at'
“PLEASE put your hand on the scanner,” a receptionist at a doctor’s office at New York University Langone Medical Center said to me recently, pointing to a small plastic device on the counter between us. “I need to take a palm scan for your file.”
John Hersey
I balked.
As a reporter who has been covering the growing business of data
collection, I know the potential drawbacks — like customer profiling —
of giving out my personal details. But the idea of submitting to an
infrared scan at a medical center that would take a copy of the unique
vein patterns in my palm seemed fraught.
The receptionist said it was for my own good. The medical center, she
said, had recently instituted a biometric patient identification system
to protect against identity theft.
I reluctantly stuck my hand on the machine. If I demurred, I thought, perhaps I’d be denied medical care.
Next, the receptionist said she needed to take my photo. After the palm
scan, that seemed like data-collection overkill. Then an office manager
appeared and explained that the scans and pictures were optional. Alas,
my palm was already in the system.
No longer the province of security services and science-fiction films,
biometric technology is on the march. Facebook uses facial-recognition
software so its members can automatically put name tags on friends when
they upload their photos. Apple uses voice recognition to power Siri.
Some theme parks take digital fingerprints to help recognize season pass
holders. Now some hospitals and school districts are using palm vein pattern recognition to identify and efficiently manage their patients or students — in effect, turning your palm into an E-ZPass.
But consumer advocates say that enterprises are increasingly employing
biometric data to improve convenience — and that members of the public
are paying for that convenience with their privacy.
Fingerprints, facial dimensions and vein patterns are unique, consumer
advocates say, and should be treated as carefully as genetic samples. So
collecting such information for expediency, they say, could increase
the risks of serious identity theft. Yet companies and institutions that
compile such data often fail to adequately explain the risks to
consumers, they say.
“Let’s say someone makes a fake ID and goes in and has their photo and
their palm print taken as you. What are you going to do when you go in?”
said Pam Dixon, the executive director of the World Privacy Forum, an advocacy group
in San Diego. “Hospitals that are doing this are leaping over profound
security issues that they are actually introducing into their systems.”
THE N.Y.U. medical center started researching biometric systems a few
years ago in an effort to address several problems, said Kathryn
McClellan, its vice president who is in charge of implementing its new
electronic health records system. More than a million people in the New
York area have the same or similar names, she said, creating a risk that
medical personnel might pull up the wrong health record for a patient.
Another issue, she said, was that some patients had multiple records
from being treated at different affiliates; N.Y.U. wanted an efficient
way to consolidate them.
Last year, the medical center adopted photography and palm-scan
technology so that each patient would have two unique identifying
features. Now, Ms. McClellan said, each arriving patient has his or her
palm scanned, allowing the system to automatically pull up the correct
file.
“It’s a patient safety initiative,” Ms. McClellan said. “We felt like the value to the patient was huge.”
N.Y.U.’s system, called PatientSecure
and marketed by HT Systems of Tampa, has already scanned more than
250,000 patients. In the United States, over five million patients have
had the scans, said Charles Yanak, a spokesman for Fujitsu Frontech
North America, a division of Fujitsu, the Japanese company that
developed the vein palm identification technology.
Yet, unless patients at N.Y.U. seem uncomfortable with the process, Ms.
McClellan said, medical registration staff members don’t inform them
that they can opt out of photos and scans.
“We don’t have formal consent,” Ms. McClellan said in a phone interview last Tuesday.
That raises red flags for privacy advocates. “If they are not informing patients it is optional,” said Joel Reidenberg, a professor at Fordham University Law School with an expertise in data privacy, “then effectively it is coerced consent.”
He noted that N.Y.U. medical center has had recent incidents in which computers or USB drives containing unencrypted patient data
have been lost or stolen, suggesting that the center’s collection of
biometric data might increase patients’ risk of identity theft.
Ms. McClellan responded that there was little chance of identity theft
because the palm scan system turned the vein measurements into encrypted
strings of binary numbers and stored them on an N.Y.U. server that is
separate from the one with patients’ health records. Even if there were a
breach, she added, the data would be useless to hackers because a
unique key is needed to decode the number strings. As for patients’
photos, she said, they are attached to their medical records.
Still, Arthur Caplan, the director of the division of medical ethics
at the N.Y.U. center, recommended that hospitals do a better job of
explaining biometric ID systems to patients. He himself recently had an
appointment at the N.Y.U. center, he recounted, and didn’t learn that
the palm scan was optional until he hesitated and asked questions.
“It gave me pause,” Dr. Caplan said. “It would be useful to put up a
sign saying ‘We are going to take biometric information which will help
us track you through the system. If you don’t want to do this, please
see’ ” an office manager.
Other institutions that use PatientSecure, however, have instituted opt-in programs for patients.
At the Duke University Health System, patients receive brochures explaining their options,
said Eliana Owens, the health system’s director of patient revenue. The
center also trains staff members at registration desks to read patients
a script about the opt-in process for the palm scans, she said. (Duke
does not take patients’ photos.)
“They say: ‘The enrollment is optional. If you choose not to
participate, we will continue to ask you for your photo ID on subsequent
visits,’ ” Ms. Owens said.
Consent or not, some leading identity experts see little value in palm
scans for patients right now. If medical centers are going to use
patients’ biometric data for their own institutional convenience, they
argue, the centers should also enhance patient privacy — by, say,
permitting lower-echelon medical personnel to look at a person’s medical
record only if that patient is present and approves access by having a
palm scanned.
Otherwise, “you are enabling another level of danger,” said Joseph
Atick, a pioneer in biometric identity systems who consults for
governments, “instead of using the technology to enable another level of
privacy.”
At my request, N.Y.U. medical center has deleted my palm print.
Beware of hospitals asking for your palm print
Some hospitals are now asking their patients to scan their palms, ostensibly to compile a biometric data base to prevent identity theft.Don’t do it! Nor is the palm scan mandatory; it’s purely optional. But they won’t volunteer that information unless you ask.
Singer balked. As she explains: “As a reporter who has been covering the growing business of data collection, I know the potential drawbacks — like customer profiling — of giving out my personal details. But the idea of submitting to an infrared scan at a medical center that would take a copy of the unique vein patterns in my palm seemed fraught.”
Despite her reservations, Singer still complied. Next, they wanted to take her photo. Only then did an office manager appeared and explained that the scans and pictures were optional. But by then, Singer’s palm print was already in their system.
Consumer advocates are sounding the warning that more and more institutions are employing biometric data “to improve convenience,” but we are paying for that convenience with the loss of our privacy.
Fingerprints, facial dimensions and vein patterns are unique, and should be treated as carefully as genetic samples. So collecting such information for expediency could actually increase the risks of serious identity theft. Yet companies and institutions that compile such data often fail to adequately explain the risks to consumers.
Pam Dixon, the executive director of the San Diego-based advocacy group World Privacy Forum explains: “Let’s say someone makes a fake ID and goes in and has their photo and their palm print taken as you. What are you going to do when you go in? Hospitals that are doing this are leaping over profound security issues that they are actually introducing into their systems.”
N.Y.U.’s system, called PatientSecure and marketed by HT Systems of Tampa, has already scanned more than 250,000 patients. In the United States, over five million patients have had the scans, said Charles Yanak, a spokesman for Fujitsu Frontech North America, a division of Fujitsu, the Japanese company that developed the vein palm identification technology.
Yet, unless patients at N.Y.U. seem uncomfortable with the process, medical registration staff members don’t inform them that they can opt out of photos and scans. Neither does N.Y.U. have formal consent, which raises red flags for privacy advocates. “If they are not informing patients it is optional,” said Joel Reidenberg, a professor at Fordham University Law School with an expertise in data privacy, “then effectively it is coerced consent.”
He noted that N.Y.U. medical center has had recent incidents in which computers or USB drives containing unencrypted patient data have been lost or stolen, suggesting that the center’s collection of biometric data might increase patients’ risk of identity theft.
At her request, N.Y.U. medical center did delete Singer’s palm print.
Here’s what to do if a hospital, doctor’s office, or some other institution wants to scan your palm, take your photo, or obtain some other biometric information from you:
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