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Paramedic fired over photos; appealing to board publicly tonight
BY ANDRELL BOWER, News Reporter
Published: Friday, October 6, 2006 1:30 PM CDT
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KIRKSVILLE - A paramedic suspended without pay after posting photos of an ATV and bus wreck on the Internet was fired Thursday, one day before a hearing with the Adair County Ambulance District board.
Chris Drennan, who worked for ACAD for 11 years, was suspended Sept. 15 because administration alleged the photos he posted on the Internet of a bloodied school bus and wrecked ATV violated the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 and ACAD policy. He is scheduled for a hearing Friday at 7 p.m. at the ACAD office on 606 W. Potter Ave.
The termination notice written by ACAD Chief Jason Albert dropped the HIPAA allegations but stated Drennan did not obtain "proper authorization" from ACAD or "proper written authorization" from the patient to publish photos of the scene and comments related to the condition of 13-year-old Zach Reeves, who was injured in the accident. The notice also states that Drennan's screen name, which uses the ACAD acronym, indicated he was speaking on behalf of the ambulance district when he made the posts.
Albert acknowledged in an interview today he did not believe the photos and comments violated HIPAA, as originally stated in the Sept. 15 suspension letter.
"His posting photos violated ambulance district policy," he said. "The employees at ACAD are forbidden from distributing personal or confidential information regarding patients at any time."
According to the ACAD employee manual, the ambulance district refuses to release confidential information to outside sources without the patient's written authorization.
Drennan obtained a consent form from Reeves' father on Sept. 5 to publish the photos.
But Albert, who spoke with the teen's mother during the ambulance district's investigation into the alleged violations, said Drennan did not obtain consent prior to publishing the photos, which were posted Sept. 3.
Drennan said he did not talk with Albert before posting photos because he believes the photos are his property and are not confidential information.
BY ANDRELL BOWER, News Reporter
Published: Friday, October 6, 2006 1:30 PM CDT
E-mail this story | Print this page
KIRKSVILLE - A paramedic suspended without pay after posting photos of an ATV and bus wreck on the Internet was fired Thursday, one day before a hearing with the Adair County Ambulance District board.
Chris Drennan, who worked for ACAD for 11 years, was suspended Sept. 15 because administration alleged the photos he posted on the Internet of a bloodied school bus and wrecked ATV violated the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 and ACAD policy. He is scheduled for a hearing Friday at 7 p.m. at the ACAD office on 606 W. Potter Ave.
The termination notice written by ACAD Chief Jason Albert dropped the HIPAA allegations but stated Drennan did not obtain "proper authorization" from ACAD or "proper written authorization" from the patient to publish photos of the scene and comments related to the condition of 13-year-old Zach Reeves, who was injured in the accident. The notice also states that Drennan's screen name, which uses the ACAD acronym, indicated he was speaking on behalf of the ambulance district when he made the posts.
Albert acknowledged in an interview today he did not believe the photos and comments violated HIPAA, as originally stated in the Sept. 15 suspension letter.
"His posting photos violated ambulance district policy," he said. "The employees at ACAD are forbidden from distributing personal or confidential information regarding patients at any time."
According to the ACAD employee manual, the ambulance district refuses to release confidential information to outside sources without the patient's written authorization.
Drennan obtained a consent form from Reeves' father on Sept. 5 to publish the photos.
But Albert, who spoke with the teen's mother during the ambulance district's investigation into the alleged violations, said Drennan did not obtain consent prior to publishing the photos, which were posted Sept. 3.
Drennan said he did not talk with Albert before posting photos because he believes the photos are his property and are not confidential information.