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A class action lawsuit regarding the recordings was filed against the hospital in 2016 on behalf of a patient who alleged she was filmed while undergoing an emergency Caesarean section in late 2012. Courtesy photo
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Former Sharp Hospital doctor claims corroboration of secret recording lawsuit

REGION — Sharp Grossmont Hospital’s former chief of anesthesia said today that he can corroborate claims, alleged in a recently filed lawsuit, that around 1,800 female patients were secretly recorded during sensitive medical procedures in the hospital’s women’s center.

Dr. Patrick Sullivan alleges that he was forced out of the hospital after bringing his concerns to Sharp leadership that women were being surreptitiously filmed in 2012 and 2013 while undergoing a wide range of procedures such as childbirth and hysterectomies.

A lawsuit filed against the hospital last month on behalf of around 80 women alleges that around 1,800 patients were recorded, a figure Sullivan alleges is accurate.

Sharp President and CEO Chris Howard, in a statement issued on April 4, said cameras were installed in the operating rooms at the women’s center in order to combat a series of thefts of the powerful anesthetic propofol, as well as operating room equipment.

Howard stated that while the cameras “were intended to record only individuals in front of the anesthesia carts, others, including patients and medical personnel in the operating rooms, were at times visible to the cameras and recorded without sound.”

The hospital maintains that the recordings were only made in connection with the drug/equipment thefts investigation and have not been used again, though it acknowledged that at least some the videos still exist.

The video footage is “kept in a secured safe in our security department” and copies have been provided “to third parties in response to legal processes or specific patient authorizations or requests.”

While the exact number of videos the hospital made is uncertain, Sullivan alleges that a “male security guard has reviewed at least 6,966 video
clips between February and June 2013” and estimated that “he reviewed another 14,000 clips between July 2012 and February 2013.”

About half of the recordings were deleted when operating room computers were “refreshed” in 2013, according to the lawsuit.

Howard stated that as a result of the hospital’s investigation into the propofol thefts, “the individual who we believed was improperly removing the drugs” was identified and “is no longer affiliated with Sharp HealthCare.”

Sullivan alleges that after he informed hospital leadership about the cameras, it took “more than 100 days” before the hospital stopped making the recordings. In the interim, Sullivan said he and other doctors covered the camera lenses with tape.

Sullivan alleges that he discovered cameras in the women’s center again in January 2016, photographed them and believes “they are still there to this day, though Sharp claims they are not operational.”

He also claims that there were no propofol thefts at the hospital, but rather anesthesiologists were using the women’s center’s inventory of propofol due to a national shortage of the drug.

Sullivan filed a wrongful termination lawsuit against the hospital in 2017, claiming that he was forced to resign after bringing up the recordings, which led hospital staff to “harass, intimidate, embarrass and retaliate” against him, including falsely accusing him of inappropriately touching a nurse.

“In response to the national attention focused on the secret recordings of women during their most private moments at Sharp Grossmont Hospital, I want the world to know their claims are absolutely valid,” Sullivan said.

A class action lawsuit regarding the recordings was filed against the hospital in 2016 on behalf of a patient who alleged she was filmed while undergoing an emergency Caesarean section in late 2012.

The suit alleged that around 15,000 videos were made of women’s center patients, capturing them “while they were emotionally and physically exposed.”