Epstein Files Show Doctors Shared Women's Health Records with Him
Documents show Epstein directed medical care and paid doctors while receiving private health information about women in his network, raising ethical and privacy concerns.
- DOJ documents show over 15,000 files reveal Epstein's medical network from 2009–2019, including doctors sharing patient health information with him.
- Epstein directed women to receive STD tests, birth-control and HPV inoculations as part of a system, regularly paying at least three New York City gynecologists to manage their care.
- A Mount Sinai surgeon stitched a young woman with 35 stitches on Epstein's dining table, while Dr. Eva Dubin arranged referrals and volunteer roles linking women and physicians.
- Mount Sinai has formed a committee to review its ties to Epstein and said it will take appropriate actions, while earlier this month Ohio State University announced an investigation into Dr. Mark Landon, who denied providing clinical care to Epstein's victims.
- Federal law prohibits doctors from disclosing patients' private information without consent, but the records show physicians discussed avoiding public-health reporting for gonorrhea, raising ethical and legal concerns as health-law experts questioned patients' ability to consent under Epstein's influence.
21 Articles
21 Articles
The Doctors Paid to Treat Epstein's 'Girls'; Swine Flu Concern; $1.5B for Measles?
(MedPage Today) -- Note that some links may require registration or subscription. The New York Times examined the network of doctors who took money from convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein to treat his "girls" for everything from head wounds...
The surgeon, Jess Ting, Epstein's friend, came from one of the most prestigious hospitals in the United States, Mount Sinai. Shortly after one of his research projects received $50,000 in donations, just from Epstein
‘Use Dr. Eva’: Epstein Files Show Reliance on Dubin, Mount Sinai
Weeks after the ribbon-cutting ceremony for the Dubin Breast Center in April 2011, Dr. Eva Andersson-Dubin spotted a coat rack at the home of Jeffrey Epstein that she wanted for her new wing at New York’s Mount Sinai Hospital. His staff located a duplicate, had it painted white to match the color she liked, and arranged for it to be delivered by his chauffeur to the breast-cancer treatment center on Fifth Avenue.
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