|
Directly from
HHS. Aug 9, 2002
MODIFICATIONS
TO THE STANDARDS FOR PRIVACY OF INDIVIDUALLY IDENTIFIABLE HEALTH
INFORMATION -- FINAL RULE
Overview:
The Department of Health and Human Services on August 14th will
publish final modifications to the Privacy Rule to ensure that
the Rule provides strong privacy protection without hindering
access to quality health care. President Bush and Secretary
Thompson are committed to maintaining protections for the
privacy of individually identifiable health information. Based
on the comments received on the notice of proposed rulemaking,
the Department modified a number of provisions of the Privacy
Rule.
The
Standards for Privacy of Individually Identifiable Health
Information (the Privacy Rule) took effect on April 14, 2001.
The Privacy Rule creates national standards to protect
individuals' personal health information and gives patients
increased access to their medical records. As required by the
Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996
(HIPAA), the Privacy Rule covers health plans, health care
clearinghouses, and those health care providers who conduct
certain financial and administrative transactions
electronically. Most covered entities must comply with the
Privacy Rule by April 14, 2003. Small health plans have until
April 14, 2004 to comply with the Rule.
Final
Modifications:
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 Department 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
clarifies that doctors and other covered entities communicating
with patients about treatment options or the covered entity's
own health-related products and services are not considered
marketing. For example, health care plans can inform patients of
additional health plan coverage and value-added items and
services, such as discounts for prescription drugs or
eyeglasses.
Consent
and Notice -- The Department makes changes to protect
privacy while eliminating barriers to treatment by strengthening
the notice requirement and making consent for routine health
care delivery purposes (known as treatment, payment, and health
care operations) optional. The Rule requires covered entities to
provide patients with notice of the patient's privacy rights and
the privacy practices of the covered entity. The strengthened
notice requires direct treatment providers to make a good faith
effort to obtain patient's written acknowledgement of the notice
of privacy rights and practices. The final Rule promotes access
to care by removing mandatory consent requirements that would
inhibit patient access to health care while providing covered
entities with the option of developing a consent process that
works for that entity. The Rule also allows consent requirements
already in place to continue.
Uses and
Disclosures Regarding Food and Drug Administration
(FDA)-Regulated Products and Activities -- The final Rule
permits covered entities to disclose protected health
information, without authorization, to a person subject to the
jurisdiction of the FDA for public health purposes related to
the quality, safety or effectiveness of FDA-regulated products
or activities such as collecting or reporting adverse events,
dangerous products, and defects or problems with FDA-regulated
products. This assures that information will continue to be
available to protect public health and safety, as it is today.
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,
doctors' offices may use waiting room sign-in sheets, hospitals
may keep patient charts at bedside, doctors can talk to patients
in semi-private rooms, and doctors can confer at nurse's
stations without fear of violating the rule if overheard by a
passerby.
Authorization
-- The final Rule clarifies the authorization requirements to
the Privacy Rule 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.
The
Department clarifies in the preamble that the minimum necessary
standard is not intended to impede disclosures necessary for
workers' compensation programs. The Department will actively
monitor to ensure that worker's compensation programs are not
unduly affected by the Rule.
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 covered entities (except
small health plans) up to an additional year to change existing
written contracts to come into compliance with the business
associate requirements. The additional time will ease the burden
of covered entities renegotiating contracts all at once. The
Department has also provided sample business associate contract
provisions.
Research
-- The final Rule facilitates researchers' use of a single
combined form to obtain informed consent for the research and
authorization to use or disclose protected health information
for such research. The final Rule also clarifies the
requirements relating to a researcher obtaining an IRB or
Privacy Board waiver of authorization by streamlining the
privacy waiver criteria to more closely follow the requirement
of the "Common Rule," which governs federally funded
research. The transition provisions have been expanded to
prevent needless interruption of ongoing research.
Limited
Data Set -- The final Rule permits the creation and
dissemination of a limited data set (that does not include
directly identifiable information) for research, public health,
and health care operations. In addition, to further protect
privacy, the final Rule conditions disclosure of the limited
data set on a covered entity and the recipient entering into a
data use agreement, in which the recipient would agree to limit
the use of the data set for the purposes for which it was given,
and to ensure the security of the data, as well as not to
identify the information or use it to contact any individual.
Other
provisions:
-
Hybrid
Entities -- The final Rule permits any entity that
performs covered and non-covered functions to elect to use
the hybrid entity provisions and provides the entity
additional discretion in designating its health care
components.
-
Health
Care Operations: Changes in Legal Ownership -- The final
Rule clarifies the definition of "health care
operations" to allow a covered entity who sells or
transfers assets to, or consolidates or merges with, an
entity who is, or will be, a covered entity upon completion
of the transaction, to use and disclose protected health
information in connection with such transaction, which
include due diligence and transferring records containing
protected health information as part of the transaction.
-
Group
Health Plan Disclosures of Enrollment and Disenrollment
Information -- The final Rule allows a group health
plan, a health insurance issuer, or HMO acting for a group
health plan to disclose to a plan sponsor, such as an
employer, information on whether the individual is enrolled
in or has disenrolled from a plan offered by the sponsor
without amending the plan documents.
-
Accounting
of Disclosures -- The final Rule exempts disclosures
made pursuant to an authorization from the accounting
requirements. The authorization process itself adequately
protects individual privacy by assuring that the
individual's permission is given both knowingly and
voluntarily. The final Rule also exempts from the accounting
requirements incidental disclosures, and disclosures that
are part of a limited data set. The Rule provides a
simplified alternative approach for accounting for multiple
research disclosures that includes providing a description
of the research for which an individual's protected health
information may have been disclosed and the researcher's
contact information.
-
Disclosure
for Treatment, Payment, or Health Care Operations of Another
Entity- The final Rule clarifies 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 covered entity.
-
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.
The final
Rule also includes technical corrections and additional
clarifications related to various sections of the existing rule.
The final Rule is designed to ensure that protections for
patient privacy are implemented in a manner that maximizes
privacy while not compromising either the availability or the
quality of medical care.
On July 6,
2001, the Department issued its first guidance to answer common
questions and clarify certain of the Privacy Rule's provisions.
The Department is committed to assisting covered entities come
into compliance with the Rule. Therefore, the Department will
update the guidance to reflect the modifications adopted in this
final Rule. The revised guidance will be available on the HHS
Office for Civil Rights Privacy Web site at http://www.hhs.gov/ocr/hipaa/.
|