|
Fact Sheet
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Monday, April 14, 2003 |
Contact: HHS Press Office
(202) 690-6343 |
PROTECTING THE PRIVACY OF PATIENTS' HEALTH
INFORMATION
Overview: The first-ever federal privacy standards
to protect patients' medical records and other
health information provided to health plans,
doctors, hospitals and other health care providers
took effect on April 14, 2003. Developed by
the Department of Health and Human Services
(HHS), these new standards provide patients
with access to their medical records and more
control over how their personal health information
is used and disclosed. They represent a uniform,
federal floor of privacy protections for consumers
across the country. State laws providing additional
protections to consumers are not affected by
this new rule.
Congress called on HHS to issue patient privacy
protections as part of the Health Insurance
Portability and Accountability Act of 1996
(HIPAA). HIPAA included provisions designed
to encourage electronic transactions and also
required new safeguards to protect the security
and confidentiality of health information.
The final regulation covers health plans, health
care clearinghouses, and those health care
providers who conduct certain financial and
administrative transactions (e.g., enrollment,
billing and eligibility verification) electronically.
Most health insurers, pharmacies, doctors and
other health care providers were required to
comply with these federal standards beginning
April 14, 2003. As provided by Congress, certain
small health plans have an additional year
to comply. HHS has conducted extensive outreach
and provided guidance and technical assistant
to these providers and businesses to make it
as easy as possible for them to implement the
new privacy protections. These efforts include
answers to hundreds of common questions about
the rule, as well as explanations and descriptions
about key elements of the rule. These materials
are available at http://www.hhs.gov/ocr/hipaa.
PATIENT PROTECTIONS
The
new privacy regulations ensure a national floor
of privacy protections for patients by
limiting the ways that health plans, pharmacies,
hospitals and other covered entities can use
patients' personal medical information. The
regulations protect medical records and other
individually identifiable health information,
whether it is on paper, in computers or communicated
orally. Key provisions of these new standards
include:
- Access To Medical Records. Patients
generally should be able to see and obtain
copies of
their medical records and request corrections
if they identify errors and mistakes. Health
plans, doctors, hospitals, clinics, nursing
homes and other covered entities generally
should provide access these records within
30 days and may charge patients for the cost
of copying and sending the records.
- Notice
of Privacy Practices. Covered health plans,
doctors and other health care providers
must provide a notice to their patients how
they may use personal medical information
and their rights under the new privacy regulation.
Doctors, hospitals and other direct-care
providers generally will provide the notice on the patient's
first visit following the April 14, 2003,
compliance date and upon request. Patients generally will
be asked to sign, initial or otherwise acknowledge
that they received this notice. Health plans
generally must mail the notice to their enrollees
by April 14 and again if the notice changes
significantly. Patients also may ask covered
entities to restrict the use or disclosure
of their information beyond the practices
included in the notice, but the covered entities would
not have to agree to the changes.
- Limits
on Use of Personal Medical Information. The
privacy rule sets limits on how health
plans and covered providers may use individually
identifiable health information. To promote
the best quality care for patients, the rule
does not restrict the ability of doctors,
nurses and other providers to share information needed
to treat their patients. In other situations,
though, personal health information generally
may not be used for purposes not related
to health care, and covered entities may use or
share only the minimum amount of protected
information needed for a particular purpose.
In addition, patients would have to sign
a specific authorization before a covered entity
could release their medical information to
a life insurer, a bank, a marketing firm
or another outside business for purposes not related
to their health care.
- Prohibition on Marketing. The final privacy rule sets new restrictions
and limits on
the use of patient information for marketing purposes.
Pharmacies, health plans and other covered
entities must first obtain an individual's
specific authorization before disclosing
their patient information for marketing. At the same
time, the rule permits doctors and other
covered entities to communicate freely with patients
about treatment options and other health-related
information, including disease-management
programs.
- Stronger State Laws. The new federal privacy
standards do not affect state laws that provide
additional privacy protections for patients.
The confidentiality protections are cumulative;
the privacy rule will set a national "floor" of
privacy standards that protect all Americans,
and any state law providing additional protections
would continue to apply. When a state law
requires a certain disclosure -- such as
reporting an
infectious disease outbreak to the public
health authorities -- the federal privacy
regulations
would not preempt the state law.
- Confidential
communications. Under the privacy rule, patients
can request that their doctors,
health plans and other covered entities take
reasonable steps to ensure that their communications
with the patient are confidential. For example,
a patient could ask a doctor to call his
or her office rather than home, and the doctor's
office should comply with that request if
it can be reasonably accommodated.
- Complaints. Consumers may file a formal
complaint regarding the privacy practices
of a covered
health plan or provider. Such complaints
can be made directly to the covered provider or
health plan or to HHS' Office for Civil Rights
(OCR), which is charged with investigating
complaints and enforcing the privacy regulation.
Information about filing complaints should
be included in each covered entity's notice
of privacy practices. Consumers can find
out more information about filing a complaint at
http://www.hhs.gov/ocr/hipaa or by calling
(866) 627-7748.
HEALTH PLANS AND PROVIDERS
The privacy rule
requires health plans, pharmacies, doctors
and other covered entities to establish
policies and procedures to protect the confidentiality
of protected health information about their
patients. These requirements are flexible
and scalable to allow different covered entities
to implement them as appropriate for their
businesses or practices. Covered entities
must
provide all the protections for patients
cited above, such as providing a notice of
their
privacy practices and limiting the use and
disclosure of information as required under
the rule. In addition, covered entities must
take some additional steps to protect patient
privacy:
- Written Privacy Procedures. The
rule requires covered entities to have written
privacy
procedures, including a description of staff that has access
to protected information, how it will be
used and when it may be disclosed. Covered entities
generally must take steps to ensure that
any business associates who have access to protected
information agree to the same limitations
on the use and disclosure of that information.
- Employee Training and Privacy
Officer. Covered entities must train their
employees in
their privacy procedures and must designate an
individual to be responsible for ensuring the procedures
are followed. If covered entities learn
an employee failed to follow these procedures,
they must take appropriate disciplinary
action.
- Public Responsibilities. In limited circumstances,
the final rule permits -- but does not
require --covered entities to continue certain existing
disclosures of health information for specific
public responsibilities. These permitted
disclosures include: emergency circumstances; identification
of the body of a deceased person, or the
cause of death; public health needs; research that
involves limited data or has been independently
approved by an Institutional Review Board
or privacy board; oversight of the health care
system; judicial and administrative proceedings;
limited law enforcement activities; and
activities related to national defense and security.
The privacy rule generally establishes new safeguards
and limits on these disclosures. Where
no other law requires disclosures in these situations,
covered entities may continue to use their
professional judgment to decide whether
to make such disclosures based on their own
policies and ethical principles.
- Equivalent Requirements For Government.
The provisions of the final rule generally
apply equally to private sector and public sector
covered entities. For example, private
hospitals and government-run hospitals covered by the
rule have to comply with the full range
of requirements.
OUTREACH AND ENFORCEMENT
HHS' Office for Civil
Rights (OCR) oversees and enforces the new
federal privacy regulations.
Led by OCR, HHS has issued extensive guidance
and technical assistance materials to make
it as easy as possible for covered entities
to comply with the new requirements. Key
elements of OCR's outreach and enforcement
efforts include:
- Guidance and technical assistance
materials. HHS has issued extensive guidance and
technical materials to explain the privacy
rule,
including an extensive, searchable collection of frequently
asked questions that address major aspects
of the rule. HHS will continue to expand
and update these materials to further assist covered
entities in complying. These materials
are available at http://www.hhs.gov/ocr/hipaa/assist.html.
- Conferences and
seminars. HHS has participated in hundreds
of conferences, trade association
meetings and conference calls to explain
and clarify the provisions of the privacy regulation.
These included a series of regional conferences
sponsored by HHS, as well as many held
by professional associations and trade groups. HHS will continue
these outreach efforts to encourage compliance
with the privacy requirements.
- Information
line. To help covered entities find out information
about the privacy
regulation and other administrative simplification provisions
of the Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act of 1996, OCR and HHS' Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services have established a toll-free
information line. The number is (866)
627-7748.
- Complaint investigations. Enforcement
will be primarily complaint-driven. OCR will
investigate complaints and work to make sure that consumers
receive the privacy rights and protections
required under the new regulations.
When appropriate, OCR can impose civil monetary
penalties for
violations of the privacy rule provisions.
Potential criminal violations of the
law would be referred to the U.S. Department of Justice
for further investigation and appropriate
action.
- Civil and Criminal Penalties. Congress
provided civil and criminal penalties for
covered
entities that misuse personal health information. For
civil violations of the standards,
OCR may impose monetary penalties up to $100 per violation,
up to $25,000 per year, for each requirement
or prohibition violated. Criminal penalties
apply for certain actions such as knowingly
obtaining protected health information
in violation of the law. Criminal penalties can range up
to $50,000 and one year in prison for
certain offenses; up to $100,000 and up to five years
in prison if the offenses are committed
under "false
pretenses"; and up to $250,000
and up to 10 years in prison if the
offenses
are
committed with the intent to sell,
transfer or use protected
health information for commercial advantage,
personal gain or malicious harm.
For additional information,
please click on the links below:
HIPAA Overview
HIPAA Consumer Rights
HIPAA Consumer Summary
(Above links are for PDF files
and requires Adobe®
Acrobat® Reader® to open.) |