THIS NOTICE DESCRIBES HOW MEDICAL INFORMATION ABOUT YOU MAY BE USED AND DISCLOSED AND HOW YOU CAN GET ACCESS TO THIS INFORMATION. PLEASE REVIEW IT CAREFULLY.
Original Effective Date: September 23, 2013
A federal regulation known as the “HIPAA Privacy Rule” requires that we provide a detailed notice of privacy practices to all of our patients. We know that this Notice is long. The HIPAA Privacy Rule requires us to address many specific things in this Notice.
I. OUR COMMITMENT TO PROTECTING HEALTH INFORMATION ABOUT YOU
In this notice we describe the ways that we may use and disclose health information about our patients. The HIPAA Privacy Rule requires that we protect the privacy of health information that identifies a patient, or where there is a reasonable basis to believe the information can be used to identify a patient. This information is called “protected health information” or “PHI”. This notice describes your rights as our patient and our obligations regarding the use and disclosure of PHI. We are required by law to:
• Maintain the privacy of PHI about you;
• Inform you if a breach of your PHI occurs, we must inform you for each occurance;
• Give you this notice of our legal duties and privacy practices with respect to PHI; and
• Comply with the terms of our current Notice of Privacy Practices.
As permitted by the HIPAA Privacy Rule, we reserve the right to make changes to this Notice and to make such changes effective for all PHI we may already have about you. If and when this notice is changed, we will provide you with a copy of the revised notice upon your next appointment to our office. You will be asked to sign a form to show that you received a copy of the current notice. Even if you do not sign the form, we will still provide you with treatment.
II. HOW WE MAY USE AND DISCLOSE PROTECTED HEALTH INFORMATION ABOUT YOU
USES AND DISCLOSURES FOR TREATMENT, PAYMENT AND HEALTH CARE OPERATIONS
The following categories describe the different ways we may use and disclose PHI for treatment, payment, or health care operations without your consent or authorization. The examples included in each category do not list every type of use or disclosure that may fall within that category.
Treatment: We may use and disclose PHI about you to provide, coordinate, or manage your health care and related services. We may consult other health care providers regarding you treatment and coordinate and manage your health care and related services. For example, we may use and disclose PHI when you need a prescription, lab work, an X-ray, or other health care services. In addition, we may use and disclose PHI about you when referring you to another health care provider. For example, we may send a report about you to a physician that we refer you to so that the other physician may treat you.
Payment: We may use and disclose PHI so that we can bill and collect payment for the treatment and services provided to you. Before providing treatment or services, we may share details with your health plan concerning the services you are scheduled to receive. For example, we may ask for payment approval from your health plan before we provide care or services. We may use and disclose PHI to find out if your health plan will cover the cost of care and services we provide. We may use and disclose PHI to confirm you are receiving the appropriate amount of care to obtain payment for services. We may use and disclose PHI for billing, claims management, and collection activities. We may use and disclose PHI to insurance companies providing you with additional coverage. We may use and disclose limited PHI to consumer reporting agencies relating to collection of payments owed to us. We may also use and disclose PHI to another health care provider or to a company or health plan, as required to comply with the HIPAA Privacy Rule for the payment of activities to determine the insurance benefits to be paid for your care.
Health Care Operations: We may use and disclose PHI in performing business activities that are called health care operations. Health care operations include doing things that allow us to improve the quality of care we provide and to reduce health care costs. We may use and disclose PHI about you in the following health care operations:
• Reviewing and improving quality, efficiency, and cost of care that we provide to our patients. For example, we may use PHI about you to develop ways to assist our physicians and staff in deciding how we can improve the medical treatment we provide to others.
• Improving health care and lowering costs for groups of people who have similar health problems and helping to manage and coordinate for these groups of people. We may use PHI to identify groups of people with similar health problems to give them information, for instance, about treatment alternatives and educational classes.
• Reviewing and evaluation the skills, qualifications, and performance of health care providers taking care of you and our other patients.
• Providing training programs for students, trainees, health care providers, or non-health care professionals (for example billing personnel) to help them practice or improve their skills.
• Cooperating with outside organizations that assess the quality of the care that we provide.
• Cooperating with outside organizations that evaluate, certify, or license health care providers or staff in a particular field of specialty. For example, we may disclose PHI so that one of our providers may become certified as having expertise in a specific field of medicine.
• Cooperating with various people who review our activities. For example, PHI may be seen by doctors reviewing the services provided to you, and by accountants, lawyers, and others who assist us in complying with the law and managing our business.
• Assisting us in making plans for our practice’s future operations.
• Resolving grievances within our practice.
• Reviewing our activities and disclosing PHI in the event that we sell our practice to someone else or combine with another practice.
• Business planning and development, such as cost-management analyses.
• Business management and general administrative activities of our practice, including managing our activities related to complying with the HIPAA Privacy Rule and other legal requirements.
• Creating “de-identified” information that is not identifiable to any individual, and disclosing PHI to a business associate for the purpose of creating de-identified information, regardless of whether we will use the de-identified information.
• Creating a “limited data set” of information that does not contain information directly identifying a patient. Our ability to disclose this information to others under limited conditions is discussed later in this notice.
If another health care provider, company, or health plan that is required to comply with the HIPAA Privacy Rule also has, or once had, a relationship with you we may disclose PHI about you for certain health care operations of that health care provider or company. For example, such health care operations may include: reviewing and improving the quality, efficiency, and cost of care provided to you; reviewing and evaluating the skills, qualifications, and performance of health care providers; providing training programs for students or trainees, health care providers, or non-health care professionals; cooperating with outside organizations that evaluate, certify, or license, health care providers or staff in a particular field or specialty; and assisting with legal compliance activities of that health care provider or company. We may also disclose PHI for the health care operations of any “organized health care arrangement” in which we participate. An example of an organized health care arrangement is the joint care provided by a hospital and the physicians who see patients at the hospital.
Business Associates: Some of the services or activities in our organization are provided through contracts with business associates. For example, our medical record and practice management software vendor, management consultants, quality assurance reviewers, billing and collection services, and accountants. We may disclose your medical information to our business associates so that they can perform the service on our behalf. To protect your medical information, we require our business associates to sign a written privacy agreement.
Communication From Our Office: We may contact you to remind you of appointments and we may leave messages on your voice mail or answering machine. We may contact you to tell you about treatment alternatives or other health-related benefits and services that may be of interest to you, or to assess your satisfaction with our services. Communication may be in writing, by telephone, by email or via our patient portal.
OTHER USES AND DISCLOSURES WE CAN MAKE WITHOUT YOUR WRITTEN AUTHORIZATION FOR WHICH YOU HAVE THE OPPORTUNITY TO OPT OUT
Individuals Involved in Your Care or Payment for Your Care: We may use and disclose your PHI in some situations where you have the opportunity to agree or object to those uses and disclosures of your PHI. If you do not object (Opt Out), we may use or make the following disclosures of your PHI:
• We may disclose PHI about you to your Primary Care Physician or to the physician that referred you to see us.
• We may disclose PHI about you to your family member, close friend, or any other person identified by you, if that information is directly relevant to the person’s involvement in your care or payment for you care.
• If you are present and able to consent or object (or if you are available in advance), then we may only use or disclose PHI if you do not object and after you have been informed of your opportunity to object.
• If you are not present or you are unable to consent or object, we may exercise professional judgment in determining whether the use or disclosure of PHI is in your best interest. For example, if you are brought into this office and are unable to communicate normally with you physician for some reason, we may find it is in your best interest to give your prescription and other medical supplies to the friend or relative who brought you in for treatment.
• We may also use and disclose PHI to notify such persons of you location, general condition, or death. We also may coordinate with disaster relief agencies to make this type of notification.
• We may use professional judgment and our experience with common practice to make reasonable decisions about your best interests in allowing a person to act on your behalf to pick up filled prescriptions, medical supplies, X-rays, or other things that contain PHI about you.
OTHER USES AND DISCLOSURES WE CAN MAKE WITHOUT YOUR WRITTEN AUTHORIZATION OR OPPORTUNITY TO AGREE OR OBJECT
We may disclose PHI about you in the following circumstances without your authorization or opportunity to agree or object, provided that we comply with certain conditions that may apply.
Required By Law: We may use and disclose PHI as required by federal, state, or local law to the extent that the use or disclosure complies with the law and is limited to the requirements of the law.
Public Health Activities: We may use and disclose PHI to public health authorities or other authorized persons to carry out certain activities related to public health, including the following activities:
• To prevent or control disease, injury, or disability;
• To report disease, injury, birth, or death;
• To report child abuse or neglect;
• To report reactions to medications or problems with products or devices regulated by the Federal Food and Drug Administration (FDA) or other activities related to quality, safety, or effectiveness of FDA regulated products or activities:
• To locate and notify persons of recalls of products they may be using;
• To locate and notify persons have been exposed to a communicable disease in order to control who may be at risk of contracting or spreading the disease; or
• To report to your employer, under limited circumstances, information related primarily to workplace injuries or illnesses, or workplace medical surveillance.
Abuse, Neglect, or Domestic Violence: We may disclose PHI in certain cases to proper government authorities if we reasonably believe that a patient has been a victim of domestic violence, abuse, or neglect.
Health Oversight Activities: We may disclose PHI to a health oversight agency for oversight activities including, for example, audits, investigations, inspections, licensure and disciplinary activities, and other activities conducted by health oversight agencies to monitor the health care system, government health care programs, and compliance with certain laws.
Lawsuits and Other Legal Proceedings: We may use and disclose PHI when required by a court or administrative tribunal order. We may also disclose PHI in response to a subpoena, discovery requests, or other required legal process when efforts have been made to advise you of the request or to obtain an order protecting the information requested.
Law Enforcement: Under certain conditions, we may disclose PHI to law enforcement officials for the following purposes where the disclosure is:
• About a suspected crime victim if, under certain circumstances, we are unable to obtain a person’s agreement because of incapacity or emergency:
• To alert law enforcement of a death that we suspect was the result of criminal conduct;
• Required by law;
• In response to a court order, warrant, subpoena, summons, administrative agency request, or other authorized process;
• To identify or locate a suspect, fugitive, material witness, or missing person;
• About a crime or suspected crime committed at our office; or
• In response to a medical emergency not occurring at the office, if necessary to report a crime, including the nature of the crime, the location of the crime or the victim, and the identity of the person who committed the crime.
Coroners, Medical Examiners, Funeral Directors: We may disclose PHI to a coroner or medical examiner to identify a deceased person and determine the cause of death. In addition, we may disclose PHI to funeral directors, as authorized by law so that they may carry out their jobs.
Organ and Tissue Donation: If you are an organ donor, we may use or disclose PHI to organizations that help procure, locate, and transplant organs in order to facilitate an organ, eye, or tissue donation and transplantation.
Research: Your medical information may be important to further research efforts and the development of new knowledge. We may use and disclose information about our patients for research purposes, subject to the confidentiality provisions of state and federal law. Occasionally, patients are contacted regarding their interest in participating in certain research studies. Enrollment in those studies can only occur after you have been informed about the study, had an opportunity to ask questions, and indicate your willingness to participate by signing a consent form. When approved through a special process, other studies may be performed using your medical information without requiring your consent. These studies will not affect your treatment of welfare, and your medical information will continue to be protected. For example, a research study may involve a chart review to compare the outcomes of patient who received different types of treatment.
To Avert a Serious Threat to Health or Safety: We may use and disclose PHI about you in limited circumstances when necessary to prevent a threat to the health or safety of a person or to the public. This disclosure can only be made to a person who is able to help prevent the threat.
Specialized Government Functions: Under certain conditions, we may disclose PHI:
• For certain military and veteran activities, including determination of eligibility for veterans benefits and where deemed necessary by military command authorities;
• For national security and intelligence activities;
• To help provide protective services for the President of the United States and others;
• For the health or safety of inmates and others at correctional institutions or other law enforcement custodial situations or for general safety and health related to correctional facilities.
Worker’s Compensation: We may disclose PHI as authorized by workers’ compensation laws or other similar programs that provide benefits for work-related injuries or illness.
Disclosures Required by HIPAA Privacy Rule: We are required to disclose PHI to the Secretary of the United States Department of Health and Human Services when requested by the Secretary to review our compliance with the HIPAA Privacy Rule. We are also required in certain cases to disclose PHI to you upon your request to access PHI or for an accounting of certain disclosures of PHI about you (these requests are described in Section III of this notice).
Incidental Disclosures: We may use or disclose PHI incident to a use or disclosure permitted by the HIPAA Privacy Rule so long as we have reasonably safeguarded against such incidental uses and disclosures and have limited them to the minimum necessary information.
Limited Data Set Disclosures: We may use or disclose a limited data set (PHI that has certain identifying information removed) for the purposes of research, public health, or health care operations. This information may only be disclosed for research, public health, and health care operations purposes. The person receiving the information must sign an agreement to protect the information.
OTHER USES AND DISCLOSURES OF PROTECTED HEALTH INFORMATION REQUIRE YOUR AUTHORIAZATION
PHI about you cannot be sold or used for marketing purposes without your prior written authorization.
All other uses and disclosures of PHI about you will only be made with your written authorization. If you have authorized us to use or disclose PHI about you, you may later revoke your authorization at any time, except to the extent that we have taken action based on the authorization.
III. YOUR RIGHTS REGARDING PROTECTED HEALTH INFORMATION ABOUT YOU
Under federal law, you have the following rights regarding PHI about you:
Right to Request Restrictions: You have the right to request additional restrictions on the PHI that we may use or disclose for treatment, payment, and health care operations. You may also request additional restrictions on our disclosure of PHI to certain individuals involved in your care that otherwise are permitted by the Privacy Rule. We are not required to agree to your request. If we do agree to your request, we are required to comply with our agreement except in certain cases, including where the information is needed to treat you in the case of an emergency. To request restrictions you must make your request in writing to our Privacy Officer. In your request, please include (1) the information that you want to restrict; (2) how you want to restrict the information (for example, restricting use to this office, only restricting disclosure to persons outside this office, or restricting both): and (3) to whom you want those restrictions to apply. Additionally, you have the right to request that we restrict PHI about you from disclosure to health plans when you have paid out of pocket, in full for the care you are requesting restrictions on. We are required to agree to this specific request when it meets the necessary criteria.
Right to Receive Confidential Communications: You have the right to request that you receive communications regarding PHI in a certain manner or at a certain location. For example, you may request that we contact you at home, rather than at work. You must make your request in writing. You must specify how you would like to be contacted (for example, by regular mail to your post office box and not your home). We are required to accommodate only reasonable requests.
Right to Inspect and Copy: You have the right to request the opportunity to inspect and receive a copy of PHI about you in certain records that we maintain. This includes your medical and billing records but does not include psychotherapy notes or information gathered or prepared for a civil, criminal, or administrative proceeding. We may deny your request to inspect and copy PHI only in limited circumstances. To inspect and copy PHI, please contact our Privacy Officer. If you request a copy of PHI about you, we may charge you a reasonable fee for the copying, postage, labor, and supplies used in meeting your request.
Right to Amend: You have the right to request that we amend PHI about you as long as such information is kept by our office. To make this type of request, you must submit your request in writing to our Privacy Officer. You must also give us a reason for your request. We may deny your request in certain cases, including if it is not in writing or if you do not give us a reason for the request.
Right to Receive an Accounting of Disclosures: You have the right to receive an “accounting” of certain disclosures that we have made of PHI about you. This is a list of disclosures made by us during a specified period of up to 6 years, other than disclosures made: for treatment, payment, and health care operations; for use in or related to a facility directory; to family members or friends involved in your care; to you directly; pursuant to an authorization of your or your personal representative; for certain notification purposes (including national security, intelligence, correctional, and law enforcement purposes); as incidental disclosures that occur as a result of otherwise permitted disclosures; as part of a limited data set of information that does not directly identify you; and before April 14, 2003. If you wish to make such a request, please contact our Privacy Officer identified on the last page of this notice. The first list that you request in a 12- month period will be free, but we may charge you for our reasonable costs of providing additional lists in the same 12-month period. We will tell you about these costs, and you may choose to cancel your request at any time before costs are incurred.
Right to a Paper Copy of this Notice: You have a right to receive a paper copy of this notice at any time. You’re entitled to a paper copy of this notice even if you have previously agreed to receive this notice electronically. To obtain a paper copy of this notice, please contact our Privacy Officer listed at the end of this notice.
IV. COMPLAINTS
If you believe your privacy rights have been violated, you may file a complaint with our Privacy Officer or the Secretary of the United States Department of Human Services. To file a complaint with our office, please contact our Privacy Officer at the address and/or telephone number listed below. We will not retaliate or take action against you for filing a complaint.
V. QUESTIONS
If you have any questions about this notice, please contact our Privacy Officer at the address and/or telephone number listed below.
VI. PRIVACY OFFICER CONTACT INFORMATION
You may contact our Privacy Officer at the following address and telephone number:
Privacy Officer: Cheryl Davis
Address: 2720 Fairview Avenue N Suite 200, Roseville, MN 55113
Telephone Number: 651-633-6883
E-mail Address: [email protected]
This notice was published September 30, 2013 and first became effective on September 23, 2013.