|
RESEARCH
[45 CFR 164.501, 164.508, 164.512(i)]
[See also 45 CFR 164.514(e), 164.528, 164.532]
Background
The HIPAA Privacy Rule establishes the conditions under which
protected health
information may be used or disclosed by covered entities for
research purposes.
Research is defined in the Privacy Rule as, "a systematic
investigation, including
research development, testing, and evaluation, designed to develop
or contribute
to generalizable knowledge." See 45 CFR 164.501. A covered entity may always
use or disclose for research purposes health information which has
been de-identified
(in accordance with 45 CFR 164.502(d), and 164.514(a)-(c) of the Rule)
without regard to the provisions below.
The Privacy Rule also defines the means by which individuals will
be informed
of uses and disclosures of their medical information for research purposes,
and their rights to access information about them held by covered entities.
Where research is concerned, the Privacy Rule protects the privacy
of individually
identifiable health information, while at the same time ensuring
that researchers
continue to have access to medical information necessary to conduct
vital research.
Currently, most research involving human subjects operates under the Common
Rule (45 CFR Part 46, Subpart A) and/or the Food and Drug
Administration's (FDA)
human subject protection regulations (21 CFR Parts 50 and 56),
which have some
provisions that are similar to, but separate from, the Privacy
Rule's provisions
for research. These human subject protection regulations, which apply to most
Federally-funded and to some privately funded research, include protections
to help ensure the privacy of subjects and the confidentiality of
information.
The Privacy Rule builds upon these existing Federal protections.
More importantly,
the Privacy Rule creates equal standards of privacy protection for research
governed by the existing Federal human subject regulations and research that
is not.
How the Rule Works
In the course of conducting research, researchers may obtain, create, use,
and/or disclose individually identifiable health information. Under
the Privacy
Rule, covered entities are permitted to use and disclose protected
health information
for research with individual authorization, or without individual
authorization
under limited circumstances set forth in the Privacy Rule.
Research Use/Disclosure Without Authorization. To use or
disclose protected
health information without authorization by the research
participant, a covered
entity must obtain one of the following:
Documented Institutional Review Board (IRB) or
Privacy Board Approval.
Documentation that an alteration or waiver of research
participants' authorization
for use/disclosure of information about them for research
purposes has been
approved by an IRB or a Privacy Board. See 45 CFR 164.512(i)(1)(i). This
provision of the Privacy Rule might be used, for example, to
conduct records
research, when researchers are unable to use de-identified information,
and the research could not practicably be conducted if research
participants'
authorization were required.
- A covered entity may use or disclose
protected health information for
research purposes pursuant to a waiver of authorization by an IRB or
Privacy Board, provided it has obtained documentation of
all of
the following:
- Identification of the IRB or
Privacy Board and the date on which the
alteration or waiver of authorization was approved;
- A statement that the IRB or
Privacy Board has determined that the
alteration or waiver of authorization, in whole or in part, satisfies
the three criteria in the Rule;
- A brief description of the
protected health information for which
use or access has been determined to be necessary by the
IRB or Privacy
Board;
- A statement that the alteration or
waiver of authorization has been
reviewed and approved under either normal or expedited
review procedures;
and
- The signature of the chair or
other member, as designated by the chair,
of the IRB or the Privacy Board, as applicable.
The following three criteria must be satisfied for
an IRB or Privacy
Board to approve a waiver of authorization under the
Privacy Rule:
- The use or disclosure of protected health
information involves no
more than a minimal risk to the privacy of individuals, based on, at
least, the presence of the following elements:
- an adequate plan to protect the
identifiers from improper use
and disclosure;
- an adequate plan to destroy the
identifiers at the earliest opportunity
consistent with conduct of the research, unless there is a health
or research justification for retaining the identifiers or such
retention is otherwise required by law; and
- adequate written assurances that
the protected health information
will not be reused or disclosed to any other person or
entity, except
as required by law, for authorized oversight of the
research project,
or for other research for which the use or disclosure
of protected
health information would be permitted by this subpart;
- The research could not
practicably be conducted without the waiver
or alteration; and
- The research could not practicably be
conducted without access to
and use of the protected health information.
- Preparatory to Research. Representations
from the researcher, either
in writing or orally, that the use or disclosure of the protected health
information is solely to prepare a research protocol or for
similar purposes
preparatory to research, that the researcher will not remove
any protected
health information from the covered entity, and
representation that
protected health information for which access is sought is necessary for
the research purpose. See 45 CFR 164.512(i)(1)(ii). This provision might
be used, for example, to design a research study or to assess
the feasibility
of conducting a study.
- Research on Protected Health Information of
Decedents. Representations
from the researcher, either in writing or orally, that the use
or disclosure
being sought is solely for research on the protected health information
of decedents, that the protected health information being
sought is necessary
for the research, and, at the request of the covered
entity, documentation
of the death of the individuals about whom information is being sought.
See 45 CFR 164.512(i)(1)(iii).
- Limited Data Sets with a Data Use Agreement. A data
use agreement
entered into by both the covered entity and the researcher, pursuant to
which the covered entity may disclose a limited data set to the resercher
for research, public health, or health care operations. See 45
CFR 164.514(e).
A limited data set excludes specified direct identifiers of the
individual
or of relatives, employers, or household members of the individual. The
data use agreement must:
- Establish the permitted uses and disclosures of the
limited data set
by the recipient, consistent with the purposes of the research, and
which may not include any use or disclosure that would
violate the Rule
if done by the covered entity;
- Limit who can use or receive the data; and
- Require the recipient to agree to the following:
- Not to use or disclose the information
other than as permitted
by the data use agreement or as otherwise required by
law;
- Use appropriate safeguards to prevent
the use or disclosure of
the information other than as provided for in the data
use agreement;
- Report to the covered entity any use or
disclosure of the information
not provided for by the data use agreement of which the recipient
becomes aware;
- Ensure that any agents, including a
subcontractor, to whom the
recipient provides the limited data set agrees to the
same restrictions
and conditions that apply to the recipient with respect
to the limited
data set; and
- Not to identify the information or
contact the individual.
Research Use/Disclosure With Individual Authorization. The Privacy
Rule also permits covered entities to use or disclose protected
health information
for research purposes when a research participant authorizes the
use or disclosure
of information about him or herself. Today, for example, a research
participant's
authorization will typically be sought for most clinical trials and
some records
research. In this case, documentation of IRB or Privacy Board approval of a
waiver of authorization is not required for the use or disclosure
of protected
health information.
To use or disclose protected health information with authorization by the
research participant, the covered entity must obtain an
authorization that satisfies
the requirements of 45 CFR 164.508. The Privacy Rule has a general
set of authorization
requirements that apply to all uses and disclosures, including
those for research
purposes. However, several special provisions apply to research
authorizations:
- Unlike other authorizations, an authorization for a
research purpose may
state that the authorization does not expire, that there is no expiration
date or event, or that the authorization continues until the "end of the
research study;" and
- An authorization for the use or disclosure of protected
health information
for research may be combined with a consent to participate in
the research,
or with any other legal permission related to the research study.
Accounting for Research Disclosures. In general, the
Privacy Rule gives
individuals the right to receive an accounting of certain
disclosures of protected
health information made by a covered entity. See 45 CFR 164.528.
This accounting
must include disclosures of protected health information that occurred during
the six years prior to the individual's request for an accounting, or since
the applicable compliance date (whichever is sooner), and must
include specified
information regarding each disclosure. A more general accounting is permitted
for subsequent multiple disclosures to the same person or entity for a single
purpose. See 45 CFR 164.528(b)(3). Among the types of disclosures
that are exempt
from this accounting requirement are:
- Research disclosures made pursuant to an individual's
authorization;
- Disclosures of the limited data set to researchers with a
data use agreement
under 45 CFR 164.514(e).
In addition, for disclosures of protected health information for research
purposes without the individual's authorization pursuant to 45 CFR164.512(i),
and that involve at least 50 records, the Privacy Rule allows for a
simplified
accounting of such disclosures by covered entities. Under this
simplified accounting
provision, covered entities may provide individuals with a list of
all protocols
for which the patient's protected health information may have been disclosed
under 45 CFR 164.512(i), as well as the researcher's name and
contact information.
Other requirements related to this simplified accounting provision are found
in 45 CFR 164.528(b)(4).
Transition Provisions. Under the Privacy Rule, a covered entity may
use and disclose protected health information that was created or
received for
research, either before or after the compliance date, if the covered entity
obtained any one of the following prior to the compliance date:
- An authorization or other express legal permission from an individual
to use or disclose protected health information for the
research;
- The informed consent of the individual to participate
in the research;
or
- A waiver of informed consent by an IRB in
accordance with the Common Rule
or an exception under FDA's human subject protection
regulations at 21 CFR
50.24.
However, if a waiver of informed consent was obtained prior to
the compliance
date, but informed consent is subsequently sought after the compliance date,
the covered entity must obtain the individual's authorization as required at
45 CFR 164.508. For example, if there was a temporary waiver of
informed consent
for emergency research under the FDA's human subject protection regulations,
and informed consent was later sought after the compliance date, individual
authorization would be required before the covered entity could use
or disclose
protected health information for the research after the waiver of
informed consent
was no longer valid.
The Privacy Rule allows covered entities to rely on such express
legal permission,
informed consent, or IRB-approved waiver of informed consent, which
they create
or receive before the applicable compliance date, to use and
disclose protected
health information for specific research studies, as well as for
future unspecified
research that may be included in such permission.
RESEARCH
Frequently Asked Questions
- Q: Will the HIPAA Privacy Rule hinder medical research by making doctors
and others less willing and/or able to share with researchers information
about individual patients?
-
A. We do not believe that the Privacy Rule will hinder medical research.
Indeed, patients and health plan members should be more willing to authorize
disclosures of their information for research and to participate in research
when they know their information is protected. For example, in genetic studies
conducted at the National Institutes of Health, nearly 32 percent of eligible
people offered a test for breast cancer risk declined to take it. The overwhelming
majority of those who refuse cite concerns about health insurance discrimination
and loss of privacy as the reason. The Privacy Rule both permits important
research and, at the same time, encourages patients to participate in research
by providing much needed assurances about the privacy of their health information.
The Privacy Rule will require some covered health care providers and health
plans to change their current practices related to documenting research
uses and disclosures. It is possible that some covered health care providers
and health plans may conclude that the Rule's requirements for research
uses and disclosures are too burdensome and will choose to limit researchers'
access to protected health information. We believe few providers will take
this route, however, because the Common Rule includes similar, and more
rigorous requirements, that have not impaired the willingness of researchers
to undertake Federally-funded research. For example, unlike the Privacy
Rule, the Common Rule requires an Institutional Review Board (IRB) review
for all research proposals under its purview, even if informed consent is
to be sought. The Privacy Rule requires documentation of IRB or Privacy
Board approval only if patient authorization for the use or disclosure of
protected health information for research purposes is to be altered or waived.
See the fact sheet and frequently asked questions about the research provisions
on this web site for more information about the Common Rule and Institutional
Review and Privacy Boards.
- Q: Are some of the criteria so subjective that inconsistent determinations
may be made by Institutional Review Boards (IRB) and Privacy Boards reviewing
similar or identical research projects?
-
A: Under the HIPAA Privacy Rule, IRBs and Privacy Boards need to
use their judgment as to whether the waiver criteria have been satisfied.
Several of the waiver criteria are closely modeled on the Common Rule's
criteria for the waiver of informed consent and for the approval of a research
study. Thus, it is anticipated that IRBs already have experience in making
the necessarily subjective assessments of risks. While IRBs or Privacy Boards
may reach different determinations, the assessment of the waiver criteria
through this deliberative process is a crucial element in the current system
of safeguarding research participants' privacy. The entire system of local
IRBs is, in fact, predicated on a deliberative process that permits local
IRB autonomy. The Privacy Rule builds upon this principle; it does not change
it. Nonetheless, the Department will consider issuing guidance as necessary
and appropriate to address concerns that may arise during implementation
of these provisions. See the fact sheet and frequently asked questions about
the research provisions on this web site for more information about the
Common Rule and Institutional Review and Privacy Boards.
- Q: Does the HIPAA Privacy Rule prohibit researchers from conditioning participation
in a clinical trial on an authorization to use/disclose existing protected
health information?
-
A: No. The Privacy Rule does not address conditions for enrollment
in a research study. Therefore, the Privacy Rule in no way prohibits researchers
from conditioning enrollment in a research study on the execution of an
authorization for the use of pre-existing health information.
- Q: Does the HIPAA Privacy Rule permit the creation of a database for research
purposes through an Institutional Review Board (IRB) or Privacy Board waiver
of individual authorization?
-
A: Yes. A covered entity may use or disclose protected health information
without individuals' authorizations for the creation of a research database,
provided the covered entity obtains documentation that an IRB or Privacy
Board has determined that the specified waiver criteria were satisfied.
Protected health information maintained by a covered entity in such a research
database could be used or disclosed for future research studies as permitted
by the Privacy Rule - that is, for future studies in which individual authorization
has been obtained or where the Rule would permit research without an authorization,
such as pursuant to an IRB or Privacy Board waiver. See the fact sheet and
frequently asked questions about the research provisions on this web site
for more information about Institutional Review and Privacy Boards.
- Q: Can researchers continue to access existing databanks or repositories
that are maintained by covered entities, even if those databases were created
prior to the compliance date without patient permission or without a waiver
of informed consent by an Institutional Review Board (IRB)?
-
A: Yes. Under the HIPAA Privacy Rule, covered entities may use or
disclose protected health information from existing databases or repositories
for research purposes either with individual authorization as required at
45 CFR 164.508, or with a waiver of individual authorization as permitted
at 45 CFR 164.512(i). See the fact sheet and frequently asked questions
about the research provisions on this web site for more information about
Institutional Review Boards.
- Q: How does the Rule help Institutional Review Boards (IRB) handle the additional
responsibilities imposed by the HIPAA Privacy Rule?
-
A: Recognizing that some institutions may not have IRBs, or that
some IRBs may not have the expertise needed to review research that requires
consideration of risks to privacy, the Privacy Rule permits the covered
entity to accept documentation of waiver of authorization from an alternative
body called a Privacy Board-which could have fewer members, and members
with different expertise than IRBs. See the fact sheet and frequently asked
questions about the research provisions on this web site for more information
about Institutional Review and Privacy Boards.
In addition, the Rule allows an IRB to use expedited review procedures
as permitted by the Common Rule to review and approve requests for waiver
of authorizations. Similarly, the Rule permits Privacy Boards to use an
expedited review process when the research involves no more than a minimal
privacy risk to the individuals. An expedited review process permits covered
entities to accept documentation of waiver of authorization when only one
or more members of the IRB or Privacy Board have conducted the review. See
the fact sheet and frequently asked questions about the research provisions
on this web site for more information about the Common Rule.
- Q: By establishing new waiver criteria and authorization requirements, hasn't
the HIPAA Privacy Rule, in effect, modified the Common Rule?
-
A: No. Where both the Privacy Rule and the Common Rule apply, both
regulations must be followed. The Privacy Rule regulates only the content
and conditions of the documentation that covered entities must obtain before
using or disclosing protected health information for research purposes.
See the fact sheet and frequently asked questions about the research provisions
on this web site for more information about the Common Rule.
- Q: Is documentation of Institutional Review Board (IRB) and Privacy
Board approval required by the HIPAA Privacy Rule before a covered entity
would be permitted to disclose protected health information for research purposes
without an individual's authorization?
-
A: No. The HIPAA Privacy Rule requires documentation of waiver approval
by either an IRB or a Privacy Board, not both. See the fact sheet
and frequently asked questions about the research provisions on this web
site for more information about Institutional Review and Privacy Boards.
- Q: Does the HIPAA Privacy Rule require a covered entity to create an Institutional
Review Board (IRB) or Privacy Board before using or disclosing protected health
information for research?
-
A: No. The IRB or Privacy Board could be created by the covered
entity or the recipient researcher, or it could be an independent board.
See the fact sheet and frequently asked questions about the research provisions
on this web site for more information about Institutional Review and Privacy
Boards.
- Q: What does the HIPAA Privacy Rule say about a research participant's right
of access to research records or results?
-
A: With few exceptions, the Privacy Rule gives patients the right
to inspect and obtain a copy of health information about themselves that
is maintained by a covered entity or its business associate in a "designated
record set." A designated record set is basically a group of records which
a covered entity uses to make decisions about individuals, and includes
a health care provider's medical records and billing records, and a health
plan's enrollment, payment, claims adjudication, and case or medical management
record systems. While it may be unlikely that a researcher would be maintaining
a designated record set, any research records or results that are actually
maintained by the covered entity as part of a designated record set would
be accessible to research participants unless one of the Privacy Rule's
permitted exceptions applies.
One of the permitted exceptions applies to protected health information
created or obtained by a covered health care provider/researcher for a clinical
trial. The Privacy Rule permits the individual's access rights in these
cases to be suspended while the clinical trial is in progress, provided
the research participant agreed to this denial of access when consenting
to participate in the clinical trial. In addition, the health care provider/researcher
must inform the research participant that the right to access protected
health information will be reinstated at the conclusion of the clinical
trial.
- Q: Are the HIPAA Privacy Rule's requirements regarding patient access in
harmony with the Clinical Laboratory Improvements Amendments of 1988 (CLIA)?
-
A: Yes. The Privacy Rule does not require clinical laboratories
that are also covered health care providers to provide an individual access
to information if CLIA prohibits them from doing so. CLIA permits clinical
laboratories to provide clinical laboratory test records and reports only
to "authorized persons," as defined primarily by State law. The individual
who is the subject of the information is not always included as an authorized
person. Therefore, the Privacy Rule includes an exception to individuals'
general right to access protected health information about themselves if
providing an individual such access would be in conflict with CLIA.
In addition, for certain research laboratories that are exempt from the
CLIA regulations, the Privacy Rule does not require such research laboratories,
if they are also a covered health care provider, to provide individuals
with access to protected health information because doing so may result
in the research laboratory losing its CLIA exemption.
- Q: Do the HIPAA Privacy Rule's requirements for authorization and the Common
Rule's requirements for informed consent differ?
-
A: Yes. Under the Privacy Rule, a patient's authorization is for
the use and disclosure of protected health information for research purposes.
In contrast, an individual's informed consent, as required by the Common
Rule and the Food and Drug Administration's (FDA) human subjects regulations,
is a consent to participate in the research study as a whole, not simply
a consent for the research use or disclosure of protected health information.
See the fact sheet and frequently asked questions about the research provisions
on this web site for more information about the Common Rule. For this reason,
there are important differences between the Privacy Rule's requirements
for individual authorization, and the Common Rule's and FDA's requirements
for informed consent. However, the Privacy Rule's authorization elements
are compatible with the Common Rule's informed consent elements. Thus, both
sets of requirements can be met by use of a single, combined form, which
is permitted by the Privacy Rule. For example, the Privacy Rule allows the
research authorization to state that the authorization will be valid until
the conclusion of the research study, or to state that the authorization
will not have an expiration date or event. This is compatible with the Common
Rule's requirement for an explanation of the expected duration of the research
subject's participation in the study. It should be noted that where the
Privacy Rule, the Common Rule, and/or FDA's human subjects regulations are
applicable, each of the applicable regulations will need to be followed.
- Q: When is a researcher a covered health care provider under HIPAA?
-
A: A researcher is a covered health care provider if he or she furnishes
health care services to individuals, including the subjects of research,
and transmits any health information in electronic form in connection with
a transaction covered by the Transactions Rule. See 45 CFR 160.102, 160.103.
For example, a researcher who conducts a clinical trial that involves the
delivery of routine health care, such as an MRI or liver function test,
and transmits health information in electronic form to a third party payer
for payment, would be a covered health care provider under the Privacy Rule.
Researchers who provide health care to the subjects of research or other
individuals would be covered health care providers even if they do not themselves
electronically transmit information in connection with a HIPAA transaction,
but have other entities, such as a hospital or billing service, conduct
such electronic transactions on their behalf. For further assistance in
determining covered entity status, see the "decision tool" at www.hhs.gov/ocr/hipaa/.
- Q: When does a covered entity have discretion to determine whether a research
component of the entity is part of their covered functions, and therefore,
subject to the HIPAA Privacy Rule?
-
A: A covered entity that qualifies as a hybrid entity, meaning that
the entity is a single legal entity that performs both covered and non-covered
functions, may choose whether it wants to be a hybrid entity. If such a
covered entity decides not to be a hybrid entity then it, and all of its
components, are subject to the Privacy Rule in its entirety. Therefore,
if a researcher is an employee or workforce member of a covered entity that
has decided not to be a hybrid entity, the researcher is part of the covered
entity and is, therefore, subject to the Privacy Rule.
If a covered entity decides to be a hybrid entity, it must define and designate
as its health care component(s) those parts of the entity that engage in
covered functions. "Covered functions" are those functions of a covered
entity that make the entity a health plan, a health care provider, or a
health care clearinghouse. Thus, research components of a hybrid entity
that function as health care providers and engage in standard electronic
transactions must be included in the hybrid entity's health care component(s),
and be subject to the Privacy Rule.
However, research components that function as health care providers, but
do not engage in standard electronic transactions may, but are not required
to, be included in the health care component(s) of the hybrid entity. For
example, a hybrid entity, such as a university, has the option to include
or exclude a research laboratory, that functions as a health care provider
but does not engage in electronic transactions, as part of the hybrid entity's
health care component. If such a research laboratory is included in the
hybrid entity's health care component, then the employees or workforce members
of the laboratory must comply with the Privacy Rule. But if the research
laboratory is excluded from the hybrid entity's health care component, the
employees or workforce members of the laboratory are not subject to the
Privacy Rule.
- Q: If a research subject revokes his or her authorization to have protected
health information used or disclosed for research, does the HIPAA Privacy
Rule permit a researcher/covered health care provider to continue using the
protected health information already obtained prior to the time the individual
revoked his or her authorization?
-
A: Covered entities may continue to use and disclose protected health
information that was obtained prior to the time the individual revoked his
or her authorization, as necessary to maintain the integrity of the research
study. An individual may not revoke an authorization to the extent the covered
entity has acted in reliance on the authorization. For research uses and
disclosures, this reliance exception at 45 CFR 164.508(b)(5)(i) permits
the continued use and disclosure of protected health information already
obtained pursuant to a valid authorization to the extent necessary to preserve
the integrity of the research study. For example, the reliance exception
would permit the continued use and disclosure of protected health information
to account for a subject's withdrawal from the research study, as necessary
to incorporate the information as part of a marketing application submitted
to the Food and Drug Administration, to conduct investigations of scientific
misconduct, or to report adverse events.
However, the reliance exception would not permit a covered entity to continue
disclosing additional protected health information to a researcher or to
use for its own research purposes information not already gathered at the
time an individual withdraws his or her authorization.
- Q: Can the preparatory research provision of the HIPAA Privacy Rule at 45
CFR 164.512(i)(1)(ii) be used to recruit individuals into a research study?
-
A: The preparatory research provision permits covered entities to
use or disclose protected health information for purposes preparatory to
research, such as to aid study recruitment. However, the provision at 45
CFR 164.512(i)(1)(ii) does not permit the researcher to remove protected
health information from the covered entity's site. As such, a researcher
who is an employee or a member of the covered entity's workforce could use
protected health information to contact prospective research subjects. The
preparatory research provision would allow such a researcher to identify
prospective research participants for purposes of seeking their authorization
to use or disclose protected health information for a research study. In
addition, the Rule permits a covered entity to disclose protected health
information to the individual who is the subject of the information. See
45 CFR 164.502(a)(1)(i). Therefore, covered health care providers and patients
may continue to discuss the option of enrolling in a clinical trial without
patient authorization, and without an Institutional Review Board (IRB) or
Privacy Board waiver of the authorization. See the fact sheet and frequently
asked questions about the research provisions on this web site for more
information about Institutional Review and Privacy Boards.
However, a researcher who is not a part of the covered entity may not use
the preparatory research provision to contact prospective research subjects.
Rather, the outside researcher could obtain contact information through
a partial waiver of individual authorization by an IRB or Privacy Board
as permitted at 45 CFR164.512(i)(1)(i). The IRB or Privacy Board waiver
of authorization permits the partial waiver of authorization for the purposes
of allowing a researcher to obtain protected health information as necessary
to recruit potential research subjects. For example, even if an IRB does
not waive informed consent and individual authorization for the study itself,
it may waive such authorization to permit the disclosure of protected health
information as necessary for the researcher to be able to contact and recruit
individuals into the study.
- Q: Does the HIPAA Privacy Rule require documentation of Institutional Review
Board (IRB) or Privacy Board approval of an alteration or waiver of individual
authorization before a covered entity may use or disclose protected health
information for any of the following provisions: (1) for preparatory research
at 45 CFR 164.512(i)(1)(ii), (2) for research on the protected health information
of decedents at 45 CFR 164.512(i)(1)(iii), or (3) a limited data set with
a data use agreement as stipulated at 45 CFR 164.514(e)?
-
A: No. Documentation of IRB or Privacy Board approval of an alteration
or waiver of individual authorization is only needed before a covered entity
may use or disclose protected health information under 45 CFR 164.512(i)(1)(i).
See the fact sheet and frequently asked questions about the research provisions
on this web site for more information about Institutional Review and Privacy
Boards.
- Q: If research subjects' consent was obtained before the compliance date,
but the Institutional Review Board (IRB) subsequently modifies the informed
consent document after the compliance date and requires that subjects be reconsented,
is authorization now required from these previously enrolled research subjects
under the HIPAA Privacy Rule?
-
A: Yes. If informed consent or reconsent (ie., asked to sign a revised
consent or another informed consent) is obtained from research subjects
after the compliance date, the covered entity must obtain individual authorization
as required at 45 CFR 164.508 for the use or disclosure of protected health
information once the consent obtained before the compliance date is no longer
valid for the research. The revised informed consent document may be combined
with the authorization elements required by 45 CFR 164.508. See the fact
sheet and frequently asked questions about the research provisions on this
web site for more information about Institutional Review Boards.
- Q: Can covered entities continue to disclose adverse event reports that
contain protected health information to the Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS) Office for Human Research Protections?
-
A: Yes. The Office for Human Research Protections is a public health
authority under the HIPAA Privacy Rule. Therefore, covered entities can
continue to disclose protected health information to report adverse events
to the Office for Human Research Protections either with patient authorization
as provided at 45 CFR 164.508, or without patient authorization for public
health activities as permitted at 45 CFR 164.512(b).
- Q: Can covered entities continue to disclose protected health information
to the HHS Office for Human Research Protections for purposes of determining
compliance with the HHS regulations for the protection of human subjects (45
CFR Part 46)?
-
A: Yes. The Office for Human Research Protections is a health oversight
agency under the HIPAA Privacy Rule. Therefore, covered entities can continue
to disclose protected health information to the Office for Human Research
Protections for such compliance investigations either with patient authorization
as provided at 45 CFR 164.508, or without patient authorization for health
oversight activities as permitted at 45 CFR 164.512(d).
Return to the Introduction / Table of Contents
(December 2002 HHS Guidance Document)
|
 |