Uncategorized

Healthcare system apologizes after over 500 living patients told they were dead via mail: ‘Pretty upsetting’

MaineHealth apologized after a computer malfunction sent 521 death notifications to living patients Oct. 20. Apology letters are being sent to all affected patients.

Maine’s biggest healthcare network is apologizing after hundreds of living patients received letters telling them they were dead.

MaineHealth said a computer malfunction Oct. 20 caused 521 letters to go out through a third-party vendor system, each addressed to a patient and written as if the recipient had died.

“MaineHealth sincerely regrets this error,” the organization said in a statement. “We have since resolved the issue and sent apology letters to every affected patient.”


DELIVERY GIANT’S DATA BREACH EXPOSES 40,000 PERSONAL RECORDS

Officials stressed that no one was marked deceased in medical records and that patient care wasn’t affected. 

The glitch was confined to an automated estate-notification process based at MaineHealth’s Portland headquarters, which oversees Maine Medical Center and eight other hospitals across Maine and New Hampshire.

MaineHealth, which employs more than 20,000 people, recently updated its digital record and messaging systems and is now reviewing the automation tool that produced the letters.

Automation mishaps have plagued hospital networks nationwide, from billing statements sent to the wrong families to “deceased” alerts popping up on online patient portals. 

According to a 2022 Pew Charitable Trusts report, electronic health records complexity and usability problems can lead to wrong drug orders, missed test results or other patient safety risks.

HACKERS STEAL MEDICAL RECORDS AND FINANCIAL DATA FROM 1.2M PATIENTS IN MASSIVE HEALTHCARE BREACH

Patients who received the erroneous letters can contact MaineHealth’s patient relations department to confirm their status — alive and well — and ensure their records remain accurate.

See also  Off-duty Texas deputy fatally shoots man allegedly trying to enter car with his small child inside

“It was pretty upsetting to open that,” one woman told WGME. “Why would they say I was dead? So, it was really shocking and upsetting.

“I mean, I’ve had some tests done, and my doctor is part of MaineHealth,” the woman said. “But I haven’t even been in the hospital for anything serious that I could have died from. So, I don’t even know where they got that information.”

No protected health information was exposed, the hospital said.

Fox News Digital has reached out to MaineHealth for additional comment.

Share this article:
Share on Facebook
Facebook
Tweet about this on Twitter
Twitter