British Columbia

Interior Health warns employees may be victims of privacy breach

Employees who worked for Interior Health between 2003 and 2009 may have had private info, including addresses and social insurance numbers, leaked, the health authority has warned.

Employees who worked for health authority between 2003 and 2009 may be affected

A sign for the Nicola Valley Hospital.
The Nicola Valley Hospital in Merritt, B.C., is governed by Interior Health. The health authority has warned thousands of employees may have had confidential information leaked. (Interior Health)

An RCMP investigation has revealed a possible privacy breach for thousands of employees who worked or work at the health authority in British Columbia's Interior. 

Interior Health says police contacted them in January about finding a document that contained everything from social insurance numbers to home addresses for about 20,000 people.

The information covered people who worked at Interior Health from 2003 to 2009, although the authority says there was no patient information in the document.

Interior Health is responsible for health-care operations throughout B.C.'s southern Interior, including the Thompson, Okanagan, Cariboo and Kootenay regions.

Vernon North Okanagan RCMP say there have been no arrests or charges stemming from the document's discovery, and police released the information so that those who might be affected "can take the necessary steps to safeguard themselves."

Interior Health is urging anyone who was working there during those years to reach out immediately to determine if their information was on the document.

The health authority says it has hired external security experts to review the situation, and no personal information on the document has been exposed online.

"Interior Health's top priority is to ensure that personal information is always protected," Interior Health vice-president of digital health Brent Kruschel said in a statement.