This appeal from a denial of qualified immunity obliges us to determine whether the unauthorized release of confidential medical information violates a constitutional privacy right. We conclude that it does not and therefore reverse the order of the district court.
I.
Plaintiff, Cathy Jarvis, brought this action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against officials of the Corrections Cabinet of the Common-' wealth of Kentucky when she learned that her father in October 1991, while he was an inmate in the Kentucky penal system, obtained access to her confidential medical records and those of her infant child.
According to plaintiffs fourth amended complaint, 1 her father, who was serving a sentence for rape and sexual abuse of his children, managed to examine these confidential medical records through an inmate work program. She alleges that defendants John T. Wigginton and Billy Wellman failed to *126 exercise proper care in implementing policies for inmate employment and that defendants Steve Smith and AL C. Parke inadequately supervised working inmates. The complaint charged that their negligent behavior resulted in “an invasion of plaintiffs privacy, an unconstitutional deprivation of her rights.”
In its memorandum opinion denying defendants the defense of qualified immunity, the district court relied upon two cases from this circuit that one might argue implicitly recognized a privacy interest in medical records.
General Motors Corp. v. Director of Nat’l Inst. for Occupational Safety and Health,
II.
The applicability of the doctrine of qualified immunity involves a question of law, and we therefore review
de novo
the district court’s decision.
Long v. Norris,
The contours of the defense of qualified immunity in § 1983 actions are fairly well defined. Governmental officials who perform discretionary functions, such as the defendants in this case, generally are shielded from civil liability insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
In
J.P. v. DeSanti,
Disclosure of plaintiffs medical records does not rise to the level of a breach of a right recognized as “fundamental” under the Constitution. Because disclosure of plaintiffs medical records did not violate a constitutional right, it follows that defendants were entitled to qualified immunity and that plaintiff was unable to state a claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
III.
The order of the district court is hereby reversed and the cause is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Because the district court stayed discovery, the facts have not been extensively developed. For purposes of this appeal, therefore, we accept the allegations made in the amended complaint as true. Defendants have not disputed this assumption.
