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Your Health Information Is Protected By Federal Law
Most of us believe that our medical and other health information is private and should be protected, and we want to know who has this information. The Privacy Rule, a Federal law, gives you rights over your health information and sets rules and limits on who can look at and receive your health information. The Privacy Rule applies to all forms of individuals' protected health information, whether electronic, written, or oral. The Security Rule, a Federal law that protects health information in electronic form, requires entities covered by HIPAA to ensure that electronic protected health information is secure
Who Must Follow These Laws
We call the entities that must follow the HIPAA regulations covered entities.
Covered entities include:
•Health Plans, including health insurance companies, HMOs, company health plans, and certain government programs that pay for health care, such as Medicare and Medicaid.
•Most Health Care Providers—those that conduct certain business electronically, such as electronically billing your health insurance—including most doctors, clinics, hospitals, psychologists, chiropractors, nursing homes, pharmacies, and dentists.
•Health Care Clearinghouses—entities that process nonstandard health information they receive from another entity into a standard (i.e., standard electronic format or data content), or vice versa.
Who Is Not Required to Follow These Laws
Examples of organizations that do not have to follow the Privacy and Security Rules include:
•life insurers,
•employers,
•workers compensation carriers,
•many schools and school districts,
•many state agencies like child protective service agencies,
•many law enforcement agencies,
•many municipal offices.
How Is This Information Protected
•Covered entities must put in place safeguards to protect your health information.
•Covered entities must reasonably limit uses and disclosures to the minimum necessary to accomplish their intended purpose.
•Covered entities must have contracts in place with their contractors and others ensuring that they use and disclose your health information properly and safeguard it appropriately.
•Covered entities must have procedures in place to limit who can view and access your health information as well as implement training programs for employees about how to protect your health information
Who Can Look at and Receive Your Health Information
The Privacy Rule sets rules and limits on who can look at and receive your health information
To make sure that your health information is protected in a way that does not interfere with your health care, your information can be used and shared:
•For your treatment and care coordination
•To pay doctors and hospitals for your health care and to help run their businesses
•With your family, relatives, friends, or others you identify who are involved with your health care or your health care bills, unless you object
•To make sure doctors give good care and nursing homes are clean and safe
•To protect the public's health, such as by reporting when the flu is in your area
•To make required reports to the police, such as reporting gunshot wounds.
Your health information cannot be used or shared without your written permission unless this law allows it.
First off, I'm not specifically calling you out on this but you have people who post every minute of everyday on Facebook but feel their physicians should not be privy to a patient's entire medical record? This is insane, quite frankly. Yes, your physician, and all your physicians, should have a right to see your entire medical record. Should there be a consent process in place? Perhaps. How did they obtain this? I don't have an answer for you. Some health systems have computer networking in-place allowing for the easy transfer of medical information from one physician/office to another. My experience where I live is that this is not the norm yet. There are lots of clinical situations, extending beyond controlled prescriptions in which your physician needs access to your entire medical record. In fact, there are a multitude of everyday medications beyond controlled substances in which are more dangerous than narcotics, or other controlled prescriptions.
When patients start attending four years of pre-med, and then fours of medical school, then three to five years of residency, then take their boards and start practicing medicine, then and only then, will patients be educated enough to determine how much of their chart is medically necessary enough for a treating and diagnosing physician to make good clinical decisions for their patients.
I can't stress this point enough.
When patients start attending four years of pre-med, and then fours of medical school, then three to five years of residency, then take their boards and start practicing medicine, then and only then, will patients be educated enough to determine how much of their chart is medically necessary enough for a treating and diagnosing physician to make good clinical decisions for their patients.
"Completely erroneous comparison about FB."
No it's not. It demonstrates how stupid the public and this country has become.
"Why should they have a RIGHT to see my entire medical record?"
When you become a healthcare professional, you'll come to understand. Until then, let the professionals do their jobs.
"If the types of clinical situations you describe should arise, it should be the patient's responsibility to provide the information." This is a little laughable...because patients are Not doctors. It's the doctor's job to provide a safe clinical experience for the patient, not the other way around.
"With respect to medications outside the classification of narcotics, this is why I said I can understand a centralized database used by pharmacies, but that doesn't change the fact that it's contrary to what the HIPPA language allows." HIPPA falls short is many areas. It doesn't cover all situations.
When patients start attending four years of pre-med, and then fours of medical school, then three to five years of residency, then take their boards and start practicing medicine, then and only then, will patients be educated enough to determine how much of their chart is medically necessary enough for a treating and diagnosing physician to make good clinical decisions for their patients. I can't stress this point enough.