Veterans marched in on the National Mall in D.C. on March 14 to protest President Trump and Elon Musk's plans to cut more than 70,000 workers from the Department of Veterans Affairs. Kayla Bartkowski/Getty Images hide caption
HIPAA
Tuesday
Tuesday
Monday
A sign outside Camden Yards in Baltimore, Maryland, encourages people to get a COVID-19 vaccine. Mitchell Layton/Getty Images hide caption
Companies are telling unvaccinated workers to pay more for health insurance
Friday
Some personal injury law firms now automatically target online ads at anyone who enters a nearby hospital's emergency room and has a cellphone. The ads may show up on multiple devices for more than a month. sshepard/Getty Images hide caption
Digital Ambulance Chasers? Law Firms Send Ads To Patients' Phones Inside ERs
Saturday
Tuesday
You may share everything with your parents, but health care providers might not be so open. Robert Lang Photography/Getty Images hide caption
Tuesday
Do the benefits of wider data sharing outweigh the risks from a breach involving treatment for substance use? Fanatic Studio/Getty Images hide caption
Wednesday
VA addiction therapist Brandon Coleman, now on administrative leave, testified about widespread problems with privacy breaches before the Senate Committee on Veterans' Affairs in September. Madison Kirkman/AP Images for ProPublica hide caption
Thursday
The Medical Board of California accused Peter Brabeck's doctor in 2011 of overprescribing him controlled substances. Afterward, Brabeck, who lives near Carmel, Calif., learned the doctor had hired a private investigator and gave him Brabeck's medical records. Ramin Rahimian for ProPublica hide caption
ProPublica's Charles Ornstein talks about data breaches
Friday
Keep your hands off our data! Hardie/Ikon Images/Corbis hide caption
Monday
The University of Oregon is under fire from students and some employees for turning a student's mental-health records over to its lawyers. Rick Obst/Flickr hide caption
College Rape Case Shows A Key Limit To Medical Privacy Law
Thursday
Wednesday
Mark, a California minister, says the day he was first shut out of all treatment discussions regarding his mentally ill teenage son "was the first time we really started to feel hopeless." Jenny Gold/Kaiser Health News hide caption