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The
Dawning of the Age of HIPAA
Written
By: Attorney
Jeffrey A. Marshall, CELA*
Originally
Published April 30, 2003
What
is a HIPAA? Is it...
(A)
a female hippopotamus,
(B)
a horrible new disease, or
(C)
new federal regulations, effective on April 14th, which protect the
privacy rights of patients?
Well,
if you answered (C) federal regulations covering patient privacy,
you're correct, and you have probably visited your doctor's office
in the last several weeks.
The
privacy rules of HIPAA give patients the right to view, get copies of, and
limit access to their patient records.
Patients can file complaints if they feel that a health care
provider has violated their privacy rights.
Doctors, hospitals, and other health care providers can face fines
and prison terms if they flagrantly violate the HIPAA regulations, and
therefore, they are very much concerned with staying on the right side of
these new legal requirements.
HIPAA
puts restrictions on who has access to your medical information. If you
are admitted to a nursing home and you don't want anyone to know it, the
nursing home is not allowed to tell anyone --not even your family,
friends, or clergy.
HIPAA
is creating a lot of additional work for health care providers.
Patients going in for a doctor's appointment can anticipate being
presented with lots of paperwork about the doctor's privacy policies and
asking for consent to use patient information.
The sale of paper shredders and locking file cabinets must be
skyrocketing!
HIPAA
was enacted in 1996 and it has taken all these years to devise and
implement the regulations. The
privacy rules initially required patients to give written consent for the
release of all medical information. But, after much protest by health care
providers, the final rules establish broad exemptions allowing the sharing
of patient information for purposes of treatment, payment and certain
health care operations.
If
you ever become incapacitated as a result of an accident or illness, the
HIPAA rules allow your medical information to be disclosed to your
authorized representative, such as the person you named as your agent in
your health care power of attorney. If
you don't have a health care power of attorney, this is just one more
reason why you should get one. With
a health care power of attorney, you name someone to make medical
decisions for you anytime you can't make them for yourself.
The
regulations are so complicated that confusion is widespread.
Nevertheless, health care providers, patients, and families and
friends of patients will have to do their best to deal with them.
More
information on HIPAA is available at http://www.hhs.gov/ocr/hipaa/.
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