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Federal HIPAA Regulation Mandates
Federal HIPAA Regulation Mandates
Final privacy regulations were issued by the US Department of Health and
Human Services for the HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability of
1996) on August 14, 2002. HIPAA is the law right now. On April 14, 2003
penalties will be imposed to enforce compliance with the law.
The HIPAA laws affect almost every healthcare provider. HIPAA will change the
way all these practices do business. It defines that the information in client
files belongs to the client, not the practice and MUST be protected. HIPAA will
cause sweeping changes in the way that information is handled and protected.
The HIPAA Privacy Rules require certain specific methods of handling the
protected health information (PHI) of clients. On April 14, 2003, these
changes must be implemented. Fines, penalties and possible jail time can be
imposed for non-compliance. To be compliant, a practice must:
- Review the access employee's have to protected information and
determine the "minimum necessary" access
- Develop specific policies and procedures regarding the HIPAA requirements.
- Provide training for current and all future employees on those policies and
procedures.
- Appoint a privacy officer to monitor the practice’s HIPAA compliance.
- Provide a Notice of Privacy Practices to all patients.
- Obtain HIPAA-compliant agreements with all business associates
- Get a signed Authorization every time patient information is released
per request of a client
HIPAA doesn't stop there. It also requires new procedures regarding patient
access to their information: New procedures must be implemented to provide
patients:
- Access to their medical information including providing copies at their
request
- Ability to make amendments their records
- Accountings of any and all disclosures made of their medical information for
any use other than treatment, payment and firm operations
And the practice must notify each patient of these rights with a "Notice of Privacy Practices." This notice
must include the patient’s rights, the practice's HIPAA policies and the
address of where to complain.
And HIPAA laws do not override most restrictive state privacy laws. So your firm
must be compliant with state AND federal privacy laws.
April 14, 2003, the penalties will be imposed. The fines are large enough to put
a practice out of business. For a simple violation, such as not documenting
release of protected health information in every client file affected, the fine
is $100 per standard violated, per client per year. The maximum fine per
standard violated is $25,000 per year. Suppose your firm had 3,000 clients and
an employee neglected to put a copy of the transaction in half the files of your
practice. The fine could be 1,500 patients times $100, or $150,000. And that is
for ONE violation. What would the fine be for NOT being compliant at all? And
for misuse of patient data the fine could be $250,000 plus jail time.
HIPAA compliance is not an option. HIPAA is the law right now. All covered
entities must be compliant by April 14, 2003 or face the penalties imposed.
How easy is it to face a HIPAA audit? Real easy. ANYONE can turn a practice
in. Ever had an unhappy employee leave, or experience the anger of a
dissatisfied patient? One simple call or post card can bring any practice to the
attention of the Health and Human Services' Office of Discrimination.
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