With life style shifting during the pandemic, online health communities start to attract more users (including healthcare workers and patients) to discuss health-related questions. While such online platforms provide convenience to users, with health-related information shared broadly over text and images (e.g., X-Ray scans, photocopies of documents), they also raise questions regarding privacy. In this paper, we propose SenRev to systematically measure the leakages of sensitive information in those publicly available discussions. We use SenRev to analyze 1,894,900 multi-modal and multi-lingual data elements from four different online health communities. We find that sensitive data leakages are common; overall 1,324,064 (69.88%) pieces of evidence of data leakages are detected, with 23,587 (1.78%) of them involving identifiers and 1,300,477 (98.22%) involving quasi-identifiers. Surprisingly, leakages through medical images occur more frequently in the community of healthcare professionals compared with the other communities. Finally, based on our results, we discuss the potential directions for countermeasures.