Check Your Wall Clocks - Hidden Cameras

Nurses General Nursing

Published

From the "L.A. Times"

November 18, 2004

Nurses Find Hidden Cameras at Hospital

Good Samaritan workers fear intrusive monitoring. Officials cite security concerns.

By Jia-Rui Chong, Times Staff Writer

It was the wires dangling from a wall clock that first caught the eye of the nurse, who was taking a breather after a stint in the labor and delivery unit of Good Samaritan Hospital.

A closer inspection revealed a tiny, pea-sized camera lens above the numeral "9."

Within minutes, nurses at the hospital just west of downtown Los Angeles hit the phones, alerting colleagues about the device in the break room and asking them to check other clocks for hidden cameras. In all, they found 16 tiny devices hidden within timepieces placed on the walls of lounges, a fitness center, a conference room and a pharmacy, among other locations.

"We feel they have violated our rights and our privacy," said Sussette Nacorda, 50, a nurse in the coronary care unit, who found a camera in a lounge.

Hospital officials said they installed the cameras over the summer as part of a security effort. They said they had intended to put up signs to notify people about the cameras but had not had an opportunity before the devices were discovered. The cameras had not yet been turned on, they said.

"Our goal is not at all to spy on" nurses, said Sammy Feuerlicht, the hospital's vice president of business. "Our goal is to make employees feel more comfortable, not less comfortable."

Feuerlicht contends that the hospital installed the cameras after employees expressed concern that some break rooms and other facilities were vulnerable to burglaries.

"There had been some thefts occurring in break rooms in the past," he said, adding that the plan was for security officers to review the footage if someone reported a theft.

Nurses said they were particularly incensed because they believed some of the cameras had partial views of locker rooms and a visitors' area commonly used by mothers to breastfeed. Break rooms are often used by nurses to change clothes, they said.

Hospital officials countered that the rooms should not be used for changing clothes and that they did not consider them private areas.

Jim Lott, a spokesman for the Hospital Assn. of Southern California, said it was standard practice for hospitals to install cameras and that these were the first complaints about privacy he had heard.

Hospitals have grown more concerned about security since a man killed two employees and a patient on a shooting spree at West Anaheim Medical Center about five years ago, Lott said.

"I don't know that it's wrong, bad or problematic [to have cameras] in a break room so long as people are aware that they are there," Lott said.

Cameras have also sparked controversy at Bakersfield Memorial Hospital, where nurses discovered cameras last month.

"We don't know where all the surveillance equipment is yet," said Chris Swanson, a labor representative at the Bakersfield hospital. "We have discovered surveillance cameras near some nurses' stations."

She said she believes hospital management has made inappropriate use of the cameras by monitoring the nurses' work habits.

A spokesman for the hospital said that about five cameras have operated for three years in hallways and common areas around nursing stations at Memorial Center, a satellite campus that treats patients with psychiatric disorders and chemical dependency.

"They are security cameras," said hospital spokesman Ken Keller. "They are not cameras to monitor workers or anything along those lines."

Keller said the hospital has put up signs warning visitors and employees that cameras may be operating. He said the hospital has not installed any cameras in break areas.

"That's a line we don't want to cross," he said.

Specializes in PeriOp, ICU, PICU, NICU.

Not to instigate, but I am willing to bet that their covers were pulled just in time, and that they had no intention of posting said signs before operating. :stone

BTW I do realize this is an old thread.

If the cameras were legitimately for the "protection" of the staff, why did they need to be hidden in clocks,etc.?
:yeahthat: Very good point!!

Whether they were turned on or not I have no idea, but I really doubt that this hospital intended to tell the nurses and staff about the cameras.

If it was for the concern of stuff being taken out of the staff fridge, then why weren't the clocks confined to breakrooms?

ETA: I, too, didn't read the time stamp and hadn't read Jess's comment before mine and I didn't realize that this was a very old thread. Sorry.

Well I guess if they have hiden carmers in our break room they have some goods on me.

Like many others I don't have time to take a break so they probeleby have me running to the coffe maker, grabing a cup and makeing a quick *adustment* or scrath before entering rentering a public area. They may also have pictures of me blowing my nose, or snorting saline drops.lol

We do have a few nurses that pump back there and i bet they would be pretty ticked off about beign filmed.

This makes me wonder now about where I work. Our night supervisor was telling us about a nurse that was stopped as he was about to leave because he had a Vicodin in his pocket. He said he had forgotten it was there. When us nurses asked how management knew he had it, she just smiled and shrugged her shoulders. Maybe we have a camera in our med room?!! I will have to check the clock.:rolleyes:

Don't bank on only clocks having a camera. It could be anything.

Don't bank on only clocks having a camera. It could be anything.

Indeed. Good point.

We have cameras that supposidly are not actually turned on (yeah, right).

I like to flip off, who ever is watching, when I walk by.

I work in a state facility, so I know they wouldn't put out that kind of money to do this.

Specializes in Utilization Management.

Years ago, I worked in a convenient store. I noticed that the store camera pointed at the cashier's work area, not at the products. (Like cartons of cigarettes--very popular items for thieves.)

Why?

Because management believed that the cashiers stole more money than the shoplifters stole merchandise.

In management's view, we're in a position to do the same. They can't put the cameras in patients' rooms due to HIPAA, but as employees, we have no such protections. It doesn't make a whole lot of sense to me to put the cameras in the break rooms when they can't be placed in the bathrooms, though, does it?

At least I sure hope we're not being watched as we're finally getting that much-needed bathroom break.

Specializes in IMCU/Telemetry.
I work in a state facility, so I know they wouldn't put out that kind of money to do this.

These type of cameras don't really cost very much. If you are trying to catch someone doing something, you'll spend the money.

As to cameras in a break room, this is somewhere you are ment to be able to relax. How can you do that if you are always being watched. Now I can never pick my nose again.:)

Specializes in PeriOp, ICU, PICU, NICU.

Sure, they will find new and creative ways to sneak a cam.

Specializes in Case Manager, Home Health.

If these actually were "security" cameras they should have been placed in other locations, too, unless only nurses' areas are subject to crime--areas like the doctors' break room. Did anyone check there, too?? I've got money on whether or not any spy cameras were placed THERE...

These type of cameras don't really cost very much. If you are trying to catch someone doing something, you'll spend the money.

As to cameras in a break room, this is somewhere you are ment to be able to relax. How can you do that if you are always being watched. Now I can never pick my nose again.:)

Pick your nose and flick it at the camera! :p

Despite it being inexpensive, I don't think the state of MD would put the money out for it. Admin probably doesn't even know they exist. It's not exactly new technology.

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