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Dutch health insurance database easily accessible

Published 14 December 2007

The Dutch Vecozo medical database is used by Dutch health care workers to make payments easier and to check Dutch medical insurance data; trouble is, at least 80,000 people are able to search the database, which contains personal information about nearly every Dutch citizen

You thought the British government had problems keeping personal information of U.K. citizens secret: The Dutch Data Protection Authority is investigating claims that a medical database set up by health insurance companies reveals details about nearly every Dutch citizen. Birth dates, social security numbers, health insurance information, and addresses of Dutch celebrities, MPs, and even well-known criminals can be easily traced by doctors, dentists, or suppliers of health care aids who use the database, Dutch newspaper Trouw revealed this week. The Vecozo medical database is used by health care workers to make payments easier and to check Dutch medical insurance data. At least 80,000 people are able to search the database. Vecozo, which is secured with a password and a certificate, stresses that no phone numbers can be found in the database. Celebrities are able to change their personal information, so they cannot be traced under their own name. Anyone who abuses the database will be punished, Vecozo warned yesterday, but computer security expert Bart Jacobs of Radboud University Nijmegen and TU Eindhoven told Trouw there is simply too much information in the database. “You don’t need all that data in order to verify certain procedures,” he said.

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