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