ORDER
On October 26, 1993, the court issued an order regarding claims of privilege as to three interrogatories. Defendant Central Kansas Medical Center appealed the decision to Judge Belot. On January 20, 1994, Judge Belot affirmed the decision of this court. The оrder of October 26, 1993 set deadlines for Central Kansas Medical Center to provide summaries of the documents for which a privilege is claimed, and for plaintiff to renew their motion to compel if they believe that some or all of the documеnts are not privileged. Now that that decision has been affirmed, new deadlines need to be established. Therefore, Central Kansas Medical Center shall prepare a summary of each document for which a privilege has been asserted, in accordance with this court’s order of October 26, 1993. The summaries shall be provided
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that the parties shall comply with the guidelines set forth above in accordance with this court’s order of October 26, 1993.
The sеcond issue before the court is plaintiffs motion to compel defendant Central Kansas Medical Center (CKMC) to produce the emergency room records of a non-party burn patient, filed on January 4, 1994 (Doc. 92). A response was filed by CKMC on January 18, 1994 (Doc. 96), and a reply brief was filed on January 20, 1994 (Doc. 98). Defendant Merle Fieser filed a response on January 24, 1994 (Doc. 100).
This is a medical malpractice action in which the plaintiff, Kevin Bennett, alleges that the defendant hospital was negligent in selecting, supervising and retaining defendant Fieser as a staff physician, and that defendant Merle Fieser was negligent in handling Kevin’s birth. Part of the claim of negligence is that defendant Fieser abandoned Kevin’s mother for three hours in active labor. During her depositiоn, defendant Fieser stated that she left Kevin’s mother for one and one-half hours because she had to attend to a burn patient in the emergency room. Plaintiff therefore seeks the emergency room records of the non-party burn patient in оrder to determine the condition of the burn patient and whether defendant Fieser needed to be in the emergency room to attend to the burn patient.
Plaintiff has agreed that the name of the burn patient and any other identifying information should be delеted. However, plaintiff states that if they are able to locate the burn patient by means independent of formal discovery, counsel will interview the burn patient and possibly call the patient as a witness at trial. However, CKMC has refused to release the emergency room records of the burn patient unless plaintiff agrees that they will not make any effort to ascertain the name of the patient, and will not attempt to contact the patient. CKMC contends that this condition is necessаry in order preserve the confidentiality of the patient in accordance with the physician-patient privilege. Plaintiff has refused to agree to such a condition, and therefore filed this motion.
The physician-patient privilege is set out in K.S.A.1992 Supp. 60-427. The privilege has three requirements: (1) there must be a patient and a physician, (2) there must be a confidential communication between physician and patient (confidential communication between physician and patient includes infоrmation obtained by the doctor through an examination of the patient), and (3) either the physician or the patient must have reasonably believed the communication necessary or helpful to enable the physician to treat or diagnоse the patient’s condition. State v. Pitchford,
The first issue before the court is whether the release of medical records of a non-party by a hospital with the name and other identifying information of a patient deleted violates the physician-patient privilege. No Kansas case has yet addressed this issue, and the parties have failed to cite any authority on this issue. However, the issue has been addressed in many other jurisdictions. The vast majority of states that have addressed this issue have held that non-party patient medical records are discoverable and do not violate the physician-patient privilege where there are adequate safeguards to protect the identity of the non-party patient.
Critical to the above opinions which have permitted discovery of medical records of a non-party patient is that there be sufficient safeguards to protect the identity and privacy of the non-party patient in order to preserve the spirit of the physician-patient privilege. In Trueblood, the court held that there were sufficient safeguards when the protective order prohibited the parties from revealing or contacting the non-party patients.
In the opinions cited above, not only were the names and other identifying information of the non-party patient deleted, but the courts also required that parties аnd counsel make no effort to learn the identity of the non-party patients or to attempt to contact such patients. Both conditions were deemed necessary in order to adequately protect the identity and privacy of the nоn-party patient and preserve the spirit of the physician-patient privilege. What plaintiff seeks to do in this case is the very thing that the courts in Trueblood, Ziegler, and Community Hospital Association would not permit if the medical records were turned over-to identify and contact the non-party pаtient.
In Parkson, the court refused to allow discovery of non-party medical records even if the names and identifying information was removed. The court gave the following reasoning for not allowing discovery on this condition:
Whether the patients’ identities would remain Confidential by the exclusion of their names and identifying numbers is questionable at best. The patients’ admit and discharge summaries arguably contain histories of the patients’ prior and present medical conditions, information that in the cumulative can make the possibility of recognition very high. As the patients disclosed this information with an expectation of privacy, their rights to confidentiality should be protected.61 Ill.Dec. at 655 ,435 N.E.2d at 144 .
In the absence of any requirement that the parties make no attempt to learn the identity of the non-party patient or to contact that patient, providing medical records with names and identifying information removed could nonetheless provide vital clues which would assist a party in identifying the non-party patient. Therefore, this сourt finds that discovery of non-party medical records should be permitted only on the condition that the patient’s name and other identifying information be deleted from the records, and that the parties and counsel shall make no effort to leаrn the identity of the patient or attempt to contact the patient. The court finds that both conditions are necessary in order to provide adequate safeguards that preserve the physician-patient privilege by protecting the idеntity and privacy of the non-party patient. To remove the second condition would result in a complete loss of
However, as plaintiff notes in their brief, Rule 26(e) “is not a blаnket authorization for the court to prohibit disclosure of information whenever it deems it advisable to do so, but is rather a grant of power to impose conditions on discovery in order to prevent injury, harassment, or abuse of the court’s processes.” Bridge C.A.T. Scan Associates v. Technicare Corp.,
The court finds that the case law relied on by plaintiff does not support their conclusion. First, plaintiff is relying on the discovery rules to seek the non-party рatient medical records. Protective orders can clearly be entered to prevent a party from inquiring into certain matters or to limit the scope of discovery in order to protect a party or person from annoyancе or embarrassment. Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(c)(4). Since plaintiff is relying on the discovery rules to obtain the medical records, the court has established two conditions in order to preserve the physician-patient privilege and therefore protect the identity and privacy of the non-party patient. Second, the reason courts are not allowed to prevent a party from disclosing material obtained outside of the discovery process is because it would constitute a prior restraint on free speech. Bridge C.A.T. Scan Associates,
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that Central Kansas Medical Center shall provide the emergency room records of the burn patient treated by Dr. Fieser at the Center on February 2,1985 to the plaintiff. However, the patient’s name and any other identifying information shall be deleted from those records before they are provided to the plaintiff. In addition, the parties to this case and their counsel shall make no effort to learn the identity of the patient or attempt to contact the patient.
Copies of this order shall be mailed to counsel of record for the parties.
