Many doctors the UK are angry because people filming them their smartphones. The Society of Radiographers (SoR), a medical organization the UK, said patients are secretly using their phones to film their hospital visits and talks doctors. The videos are then posted social media sites. The SoR has called a ban on video recording in hospitals and clinics. Dean Rogers, director industrial strategy, said this was a problem that affected many health workers. He said there could also be privacy concerns other people. He told reporters: "As healthcare professionals, we need to think: Does that recording breach the confidentiality other patients?"
Medical staff and hospital workers say they are worried the videos. They do not want to have videos them uploaded social media. Ashley d'Aquino, a therapeutic radiographer and union worker, spoke this problem. She said: "We had a member staff who agreed to take photos a patient, but when the patient handed over her phone, the member staff saw that the patient had also been [secretly] recording her, to publish a cancer blog." She added: "We wear name badges, so our names will be visible any video. It makes people feel very uncomfortable and anxious." Putting material online also risks making public the private medical data patients.