Building a Privacy Foundation. Setting the Standard for Privacy Health Insurance Portability and...

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Building a Privacy Foundation

Setting the Standard for Privacy

• Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)

• Patient Bill of Rights• Federal and State

Regulations• Accreditation Standards• Case Law• Professional Standards of

Practice

What Must Be Kept Confidential?

PHI:Protected Health Information

Understanding PHI

• Individually identifiable information

• Demographics• Any form or medium

– Oral

– Written

– Electronic

Medical RecordsBilling Records

Databases

Use of PHI

• Sharing, application, utilization, examination, or analysis of PHI within the organization

Disclosure of PHI

• The release, transfer, access, or divulging of PHI to an outside person or entity.

Minimum Necessary

• What can I access?– Information you

“need to know” to do your job

• Does it apply in every situation?– Treatment

– Patient

Minimum Necessary

HIPAA Requirement –

• Identify members of the workforce who need access to confidential information

• Identify what information can be accessed

• Limit access

How Do I Know…

…When information is considered private?– Did you learn it through your job?

If yes, then it is considered private

How Do I Handle…

…An individual asking for access to their record?– Individuals have a

right of access

– Route requests to appropriate department or staff

How Do I Handle…

…An individual’s request to change their medical record?– Individuals have the right to amend or

correct their record

Requests will be investigated

– Route requests to appropriate department or staff

How Do I Handle…

– Directory informationName, location, condition in

general terms

– Other type of clinical or billing information

Obtain permission

Disclose appropriate information

Use judgment if permission cannot be obtained

…A family member or close friend asking about a patient?

How Do I Handle…

…Another member of the workforce inquiring into a patient’s condition or treatment?– Determine if it is necessary to their position– Is it related to treatment?

“Privacy-Friendly” Practices

• Abide by the organization’s Notice of Privacy Practices

• Shred or destroy • Fax and copy machine

location• Talking in public areas• Keep patient information

out of public areas

“Privacy-Friendly” Practices

• Secure records in all locations

• Passwords• Computer screens• Remember individuals’

right to privacy during treatments

What Happens If…

…a privacy policy is violated?– Organization-specific

sanctions

– Right to file a complaint

– Civil and criminal penalties

Take pride and ownership in the fact that your organization is concerned about privacy and recognizes its importance inproviding quality healthcare.

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