A physician finds himself in a difficult position after his partner demands access to his secure work phone.
The conflict centers on a clash between personal trust issues and strict professional obligations regarding patient privacy.

AITAH for telling my girlfriend she can’t have access to my work phone?







As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, ‘Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.’ This situation illustrates a conflict where the OP’s professional boundary is perceived by his partner as an act of emotional betrayal. The partner is operating from a place of past trauma, where her fear of infidelity overrides the objective reality of the OP’s professional constraints. Meanwhile, the OP is protecting his career and patient confidentiality, yet he may be inadvertently triggering his partner’s insecurities by not addressing the emotional root of the request.
The OP is acting appropriately by prioritizing HIPAA compliance, as a breach could have severe legal and professional consequences. However, the emotional conflict persists because the partner feels excluded from the reality of his work. A more effective approach would be to validate the partner’s feelings without compromising the phone’s security. By explaining the specific legal risks of the device and offering transparency in other areas of his life, the OP can maintain his professional standards while providing the emotional security his partner requires to heal from past experiences.
AFTER THIS STORY DROPPED, REDDIT WENT INTO MELTDOWN MODE – CHECK OUT WHAT PEOPLE SAID.

JFC
NTA





Please be prepared to break up with her soon. She’s not mature enough to understand the law and that’s genuinely not someone you want to enter in to a legally binding contract with in the future (aka, marriage).







I get that this is a ‘trigger’ for your gf, but she should be intelligent enough to understand what’s happening. Dump her. It must be insufferable to live with someone so dense.
The author maintains that his refusal to share his device is based on legal and ethical requirements, while his partner views the secrecy as a red flag stemming from her history of being cheated on.
The central question remains: Is it reasonable to prioritize workplace privacy regulations over a partner’s request for reassurance in a relationship?







