HIPAA Privacy Policy
Effective April 14, 2003
This notice describes how medical information about you may be used and
disclosed and how you can obtain access to this information. Please
review it carefully.
Introduction
We are required by law to maintain the privacy of "protected health
information." "Protected health information" includes any identifiable
information that we obtain from you or others that relates to your
physical or mental health, the health care you have received, or
payment for your health care.
As required by law, this notice provides you with information about
your rights and our legal duties and privacy practices with respect to
the privacy of protected health information. This notice also discusses
the uses and disclosures we will make of your protected health
information. We must comply with the provisions of this notice,
although we reserve the right to change the terms of this notice from
time to time and to make the revised notice effective for all protected
health information we maintain. You can always request a copy of our
most current privacy notice from our office.
Permitted Uses and Disclosures
We can use or disclose your protected health information for purposes
of treatment, payment and health care operations.
- Treatment
means the provision, coordination or management of your health care,
including consultations between health care providers regarding your
care and referrals for health care from one health care provider to
another. For example, a doctor treating you for a broken leg may need
to know if you have diabetes because diabetes may slow the healing
process. Therefore, the doctor may review your medical records to
assess whether you have potentially complicating conditions like
diabetes.
- Payment means activities we
undertake to obtain reimbursement for the health care provided to you,
including determinations of eligibility and coverage and other
utilization review activities. For example, prior to providing health
care services, we may need to provide to your insurance carrier (or
other third party payor) information about your medical condition to
determine whether the proposed course of treatment will be covered.
When we subsequently bill the carrier or other third party payor for
the services rendered to you, we can provide the carrier or other third
party payor with information regarding your care if necessary to obtain
payment.
- Health Care Operations mean the
support functions of our practice related to treatment and payment,
such as quality assurance activities, case management, receiving and
responding to patient complaints, physician reviews, compliance
programs, audits, business planning, development, management and
administrative activities. For example, we may use your medical
information to evaluate the performance of our staff in caring for you.
We may also combine medical information about many patients to decide
what services are not needed, and whether certain new treatments are
effective.
Disclosures Related To Communications With You Or Your Family
We may contact you to provide appointment reminders or information
about treatment alternatives or other health-related benefits and
services that may be of interest to you or relate specifically to your
medical care through our office. For example, we may leave appointment
reminders on your answering machine or with a family member or other
person who may answer the telephone at the number that you have given
us in order to contact you.
We may disclose your protected health information to your family or
friends or any other individual identified by you when they are
involved in your care or the payment for your care. We will only
disclose the protected health information directly relevant to their
involvement in your care or payment. We may also use or disclose your
protected health information to notify, or assist in the notification
of, a family member, a personal representative, or another person
responsible for your care of your location, general condition or death.
If you are available, we will give you an opportunity to object to
these disclosures, and we will not make these disclosures if you
object. If you are not available, we will determine whether a
disclosure to your family or friends is in your best interest, and we
will disclose only the protected health information that is directly
relevant to their involvement in your care.
We will allow your family and friends to act on your behalf to pick up
prescriptions, medical supplies, X-rays, and similar forms of protected
health information, when we determine, in our professional judgment,
that it is in your best interest to make such disclosures.
Other Situations
Organ and Tissue Donation. If you are an organ donor, we may release
medical information to organizations that handle organ procurement or
organ, eye or tissue transplantation or to an organ donation bank, as
necessary to facilitate organ or tissue donation and transplantation.
Military and Veterans. If you are a member of the Armed Forces, we may
release medical information about you as required by military command
authorities. We may also release medical information about foreign
military personnel to the appropriate foreign military authority.
Public Health Risks. We may disclose medical information about you for
public health activities. These activities generally include the
following:
- To prevent or control disease, injury or disability
- To report births and deaths
- To report victim of abuse, neglect, or domestic violence
- To report reactions to medications
- To notify people of product, recalls, repairs or replacements
- To notify a person who may have been exposed to a disease or may be at risk for contracting or spreading a disease or condition
Health
Oversight Activities. We may disclose medical information to federal or
state agencies that oversee our activities. These activities are
necessary for the government to monitor the health care system,
government programs, and compliance with civil rights laws. We may
disclose protected health information to persons under the Food and
Drug Administration?s jurisdiction to track products or to conduct
post-marketing surveillance.
Lawsuits and Disputes. If you are
involved in a lawsuit or dispute, we may disclose medical information
about you in response to a court or administrative order. We may also
disclose medical information about you in a response to a subpoena,
discovery request or other lawful process by someone else involved in
the dispute.
Law Enforcement. We may release medical information if asked to do so by a law enforcement official:
- In response to a court order, subpoena, warrant, summons or similar process
- To identify or locate a suspect, fugitive, material witness, or missing person
- About the victim of a crime if, under certain limited circumstances, we are unable to obtain the person?s agreement
- About a death we believe may be the result of a criminal conduct
- About criminal conduct on our premises
- In
emergency circumstances to report a crime; the location of the crime or
victims or the identity, description or location of the person who
committed the crime
Coroners,
Medical Examiners and Funeral Directors. We may release medical
information to a coroner or medical examiner. This may be necessary,
for example, to identify a deceased person or determine the cause of
death. We may also release medical information about patients to
funeral directors as necessary to carry out their duties.
Inmates. If you are an inmate of a correctional institution or under
the custody of a law enforcement official, we may release medical
information about you to the correctional institution or law
enforcement official. This release would be necessary for the
institution to provide you with health care, to protect your health and
safety or the health and safety of others, or for the safety and
security of the correctional institution.
Serious Threats. As permitted by applicable law and standards of
ethical conduct, we may use and disclose protected health information
if we, in good faith, believe that the use of disclosure is necessary
to prevent or lessen a serious and imminent threat to the health or
safety of a person or the public.
Disaster Relief. When permitted by law, we may coordinate our uses and
disclosures of protected health information with public or private
entities authorized by law or by charter to assist in disaster relief
efforts.
Your Rights
- You
have the right to request restrictions on our uses and disclosures of
protected health information for treatment, payment and health care
operations. However, we are not required to agree to your request.
- You
have the right to reasonably request to receive communications of
protected health information by alternative means or at alternative
locations.
- Subject to payment of a
reasonable copying charge as provided by state law, you have the right
to inspect or obtain a copy of the protected health information
contained in your medical and billing records and in any other practice
records used by us to make decisions about you, except for:
- Psychotherapy
notes, which are notes recorded by a mental health professional
documenting or analyzing the contents of conversation during a private
counseling session or a group, joint or family counseling session and
that have been separated from the rest of your medical record
- Information
compiled in a reasonable anticipation of, or for use in, a civil,
criminal, or administrative action or proceeding.
- Protected health information involving laboratory tests when your access is required by law
- If
you are a prison inmate and obtaining such information would jeopardize
your health, safety, security, custody, or rehabilitation or that of
other inmates, or the safety of any officer, employee, or other person
at the correctional institution or person responsible for transporting
you
- If we obtained or created protected
health information as part of a research study for as long as the
research is in progress, provided that you agreed to the temporary
denial of access when consenting to participate in the research
- Your
protected health information is contained in records kept by a federal
agency or contractor when your access is required by law
- If
the protected health information was obtained from someone other than
us under a promise of confidentiality and the access requested would be
reasonably likely to reveal the source of the information
We may also deny a request for access to protected health information if:
- A
licensed health care professional has determined, in the exercise of
professional judgment, that the access requested is reasonably likely
to endanger your life or physical safety or that of another person
- The
protected health information makes reference to another person (unless
such other person is a health care provider) and a licensed health care
professional has determined, in the exercise of professional judgment,
that the access requested is reasonably likely to cause substantial
harm to such other person
- The
request for access is made by the individual?s personal representative
and a licensed health care professional has determined, in the exercise
of professional judgment, that the provision of access to such personal
representative is reasonably likely to cause substantial harm to you or
another person
If
we deny a request for access for any of the three reasons described
above, then you have the right to have our denial reviewed in
accordance with the requirements of applicable law.
- You
have the right to request a correction to your protected health
information, but we may deny your request for correction, if we
determine that the protected health information or record that is the
subject of the request:
- Was
not created by us, unless you provide a reasonable basis to believe
that the originator of protected health information is no longer
available to act on the requested amendment
- Is not part of your medical or billing records
- Is not available for inspection as set forth above
- Is not accurate and complete
In
any event, any agreed upon correction will be included as an addition
to, and not a replacement of, already existing records.
- You
have the right to receive an accounting of disclosures of protected
health information made by us to individuals or entities other than to
you for the period provided by law, except for disclosures:
- To carry out treatment, payment and health care operations as provided above
- To persons involved in your care or for other notification purposes as provided by law
- For national security or intelligence purposes as provided by law
- To correctional institutions or law enforcement officials as provided by law
- That occurred prior to April 14, 2003
- That are otherwise not required by law to be included in the accounting
You have the right to request and receive a paper copy of this notice from us.
The above rights may be exercised only by written communication to us.
Any revocation or other modification of consent must be in writing
delivered to us.
Complaints
If you believe that your privacy rights have been violated, you should
immediately contact our Practice or our Privacy Officer. All complaints
must be submitted in writing. We will not take action against you for
filing a complaint. You also may file a complaint with the Secretary of
Health and Human Services.
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