Page, Wolfberg &
Wirth, LLC
Final Modifications to the HIPAA Privacy Rule
Ambulance Industry Overview
August 12, 2002
The Department
of Health and Human Services (DHHS) has released the final modifications to the
HIPAA Privacy Rule. This means that the
regulations are now completed and in place for the April 14, 2003 compliance
deadline. The final regulations contain
many significant changes. Although the
final regulations contain many positive changes for the ambulance industry,
HIPAA compliance will continue to be a multi-faceted challenge for ambulance
services.
The April 14,
2003 compliance deadline remains in place, and ambulance services are still
included as “covered entities” under the Privacy Rule!
Some of the
most significant changes to the regulations include:
Consent. The most significant changes to the Privacy Rule
affecting ambulance services are those dealing with consent. Ambulance services and other covered
entities will no longer be required to obtain signed consent forms to
use a patient’s Protected Health Information (PHI) for purposes of treatment,
payment or health care operations.
Consent forms will be optional under the final regulations.
Disclosure for
Treatment, Payment, or Health Care Operations of Another Entity. One of the most significant, positive changes
for the ambulance industry is that covered entities can disclose protected
health information for the treatment and payment activities of another covered
entity or a health care provider, and for certain health care operations of
another entity. This means that
hospitals will be able to give “face sheets” and other patient information to
ambulance services for billing purposes without HIPAA barriers.
Notice. The Rule requires ambulance services and
other covered entities to provide patients with notice of the patient's privacy
rights and the privacy practices of the covered entity. While the consent
requirement has been relaxed, the notice requirement has been considerably strengthened,
and now requires ambulance services and other covered entities to make a good
faith effort to obtain patient's written acknowledgement of the notice of
privacy rights and practices. There are
exceptions that apply in emergency situations, but the general rule is that
providers must obtain written acknowledgment of the patient’s receipt of the
Notice of Privacy Practices.
Incidental Use and Disclosure. The final Rule acknowledges that uses or
disclosures that are incidental to an otherwise permitted use or disclosure may
occur. Such incidental uses or disclosures are not considered a violation of
the Rule provided that the covered entity has met the reasonable safeguards and
minimum necessary requirements. For example, if these requirements are met,
hospitals may keep patient charts at bedside and providers can have discussions
about the patient’s care without fear of violating the rule if overheard by a
passerby.
Marketing. The final Rule requires a
covered entity to obtain an individual's prior written authorization to use his
or her protected health information for marketing purposes except for a
face-to-face encounter or a communication involving a promotional gift of
nominal value. The final Rule defines marketing to distinguish between the
types of communications that are and are not marketing, and makes clear that a
covered entity is prohibited from selling lists of patients and enrollees to
third parties or from disclosing protected health information to a third party
for the marketing activities of the third party, without the individual's
authorization. The Rule also clarifies that covered entities communicating with
patients about the covered entity's own health-related products and services
are not considered marketing.
Authorization. The final Rule clarifies the authorization
requirements to, among other things, eliminate separate authorization
requirements for covered entities.
Patients will have to grant permission in advance for each type of
non-routine use or disclosure, but providers will not have to use different
types of forms. These modifications also consolidate and streamline core
elements and notification requirements.
Minimum Necessary. The final Rule exempts from the minimum
necessary standards any uses or disclosures for which the covered entity has
received an authorization. The Rule previously exempted only certain types of
authorizations from the minimum necessary requirement, but since the rule will
only have one type of authorization, the exemption is now applied to all
authorizations. Minimum necessary requirements are still in effect to ensure an
individual's privacy for most other uses and disclosures.
Parents and Minors. The final Rule clarifies that state law, or
other applicable law, governs in the area of parents and minors. Generally, the
Privacy Rule provides parents with new rights to control the health information
about their minor children, with limited exceptions that are based on state or
other applicable law and professional practice. For example, where a state has
explicitly addressed disclosure of a minor's health information to a parent, or
access to a child's medical record by a parent, the final Rule clarifies that
state law governs. In addition, the final Rule clarifies that, in the special
cases in which the minor controls his or her own health information under such
law and that law does not define the parents' ability to access the child's
health information a licensed health care provider continues to be able to
exercise discretion to grant or deny such access as long as that decision is
consistent with the state or other applicable law.
Business Associates. The final Rule gives ambulance services and
other providers up to an additional year to change existing written contracts
to come into compliance with the business associate requirements. However, if any of your contracts with
existing business associates come up for renewal between April 14, 2003 and
April 14, 2004, you will have to include the business associate provisions in
the contract at the time of the renewal.
Accounting of
Disclosures. The final Rule exempts
disclosures made pursuant to an authorization from the accounting requirements.
Protected Health
Information: Exclusion for Employment Records. The final Rule clarifies that employment records
maintained by a covered entity in its capacity as an employer are excluded from
the definition of protected health information. The modifications do not change
the fact that individually identifiable health information created, received,
or maintained by a covered entity in its health care capacity is protected
health information.
Page, Wolfberg &
Wirth, LLC continues to serve as the ambulance industry leader in HIPAA
compliance resources. To order the
revised and expanded “Ambulance Service Guide to HIPAA Compliance – Second
Edition” – CLICK HERE!
PWW also provides
training and compliance services for ambulance services under the new Privacy
Rule.
Also, be sure to sign up
for our upcoming audio conference: “HIPAA in the Home Stretch: Compliance Under
the Final Privacy Rule” on September 19, 2002.
CLICK
HERE to register for this important audio conference!