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About Us |
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HIPAA Notice of Privacy Practices
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Your rights under the Health Insurance Portability & Accountability Act of
1996 (HIPAA)
How Your Medical Information May Be Used and Disclosed & How You Can Get
Access To This Information If you have any questions about this notice,
please contact the facility's Health Information Management Department.
PLEASE REVIEW CAREFULLY.
Who Will Follow This Notice: This notice describes the
facility's practices and that of:
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Any health care professional authorized to enter information into your
facility chart
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All departments and units of the facility
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Any member of a volunteer group allowed to help you while you are in the
facility
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All employees, staff, agents and other facility personnel
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All entities, sites and locations within this facility's system will follow
the terms of this notice. They also may share medical information with each
other for treatment, payment and health care operations purposes.
Our Pledge Regarding Medical Information: We understand that
medical information about you and your healthcare is personal. We are committed
to protecting medical information about you. A record is created of the care and
services you receive at this facility. This record is needed to provide the
necessary care and to comply with legal requirements. This notice applies to all
of the records of your care generated by the facility. Your personal physician
may have different policies or notices regarding the physician's use and
disclosure of your medical information in the physician's office or clinic.
This notice will tell about the ways in which the facility may use and
disclose medical information about you. Also described are your rights and
certain obligations we have regarding the use and disclosure of medical
information.
The law requires the facility to:
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Make sure that medical information that identifies you is kept private;
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Inform you of our legal duties and privacy practices with respect to
medical information about you; and
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Follow the terms of the notice that is currently in effect.
HOW THE FACILITY MAY USE and DISCLOSE YOUR MEDICAL INFORMATION:
The following categories describe different ways the facility uses and discloses
medical information. Each category will be explained. Not every possible use or
disclosure will be listed. However, all the different ways the facility is
permitted to use and disclose information will fall within one of these
categories.
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Treatment. Your medical information may be used to provide
you with medical treatment or services. This medical information may be
disclosed to physicians, nurses, technicians, or other agents of the
facility who are involved in your care at the facility.
Your medical information may also be disclosed to healthcare students,
interns and residents.
For example: A doctor treating you for a broken leg may need to know
if you have diabetes because diabetes may slow the healing process. The doctor
may need to tell the dietitian about the diabetes so appropriate meals can be
arranged. Different departments of the facility may also share medical
information about you in order to coordinate your different needs, such as
prescriptions, lab work and x-rays. The facility also may disclose medical
information about you to people outside the facility who may be involved in your
medical care after you leave the facility, such as family members, home health
agencies, or others used to provide services that are part of your care.
For example: The health plan or insurance company may need
information about surgery you received at the facility so they can provide
payment for the surgery. Information may also be given to someone who helps pay
for your care. Your health plan or insurance company may also need information
about a treatment you are going to receive to obtain prior approval or to
determine whether they will cover the treatment.
- Health Care Operations. Your medical information may be
used and disclosed for purposes of furthering day-to-day facility operations.
These uses and disclosures are necessary to run the facility and to monitor the
quality of care our patients receive.
For example: Your medical information may be:
- Reviewed to evaluate the treatment and services performed by our staff in
caring for you.
- Combined with that of other facility patients to decide what additional
services the facility should offer, what services are not needed, and whether
certain new treatments are affective.
- Disclosed to doctors, nurses, technicians, and other agents of the facility
for review and learning purposes.
- Disclosed to healthcare students, interns and residents.
- Combined with information from other facilities to compare how we are doing
and see where we can improve the care and services offered. Information that
identifies you in this set of medical information may be removed so others may
use it to study health care and health care delivery without knowing who the
specific patients are.
- Census Information: Limited information about you may be
used in the census report while you are a patient at the facility. This
information may include your name, location in the facility, admission date and
room number.
- Clergy Members: While you are a patient in the facility,
upon written consent, information about you may be disclosed to your specific
clergy. This information may include your name, location in the facility,
admission date and room number.
- Appointment Reminders. Your medical information may be used
to contact you as a reminder of an appointment you have for treatment or medical
care at the facility.
- Treatment Alternatives. Your medical information may be
used to tell you about or recommend possible treatment options or alternatives
that may be of interest to you.
- Health-Related Benefits and Services. Your medical
information may be used to tell you about health-related benefits or services
that may be of interest to you.
- Private Accreditation Organizations. Your medical
information may be used to fulfill this facility's requirements to meet the
guidelines of private hospital accreditation organizations such as JCAHO, NCQA,
etc.
- Individuals Involved in Your Care. With your permission,
your medical information may be released to a family member, guardian or other
individuals involved in your care. They may also be told about your condition
unless you have requested additional restrictions. In addition, your medical
information may be disclosed to an entity assisting in a disaster relief effort
so your family can be notified about your condition, status, and location.
- Research. Under certain circumstances, your medical
information may be used and disclosed for research purposes.
For example: A research project may involve comparing the health and
recovery of all patients who received one medication to those who received
another, for the same conditions. All research projects, however, are subject to
a special approval process. This process evaluates a proposed research project
and its use of medical information, balancing the research needs with the
patients' need for privacy of their medical information. Your medical
information may be disclosed to people preparing to conduct a research project;
for example, helping them look for patients with specific medical needs, so long
as the medical information they review does not leave the facility. We will
almost always ask for your specific permission if the researcher will have
access to your name, address or other information that reveals who you are, or
will be involved in your care at the facility.
- As Required by Law. Your medical information will be
disclosed when required to do so by federal, state, or local authorities, laws,
rules and/or regulations.
- Lawsuits and Disputes. If you are involved in a lawsuit or
a dispute, your medical information will be disclosed in response to a court or
administration order, subpoena, discovery request, or other lawful process by
someone else involved in the dispute when we are legally required to respond.
- Law Enforcement. Your medical information will be released
if requested by a law enforcement official:
In response to a court order, subpoena, warrant, summons or similar process;
To identify or locate a suspect, fugitive, material witness, or missing
person;
About the victim of a crime if, under certain limited circumstances, we are
unable to obtain the person's agreement;
About a death we believe may be the result of criminal conduct;
In emergency circumstances to report a crime; the location of the crime or
victims; or the identify, description or location of the person who committed
the crime.
- National Security and Intelligence Activities. Your medical
information will be released to authorized federal officials for intelligence,
counterintelligence, and other national security activities authorized by law.
- Protective Services for the President and Others. Your
medical information may be disclosed to authorized federal officials so they may
provide protection to the President, other authorized persons or foreign heads
of state or conduct special investigations.
- To Alert a Serious Threat to Health or Safety. Your medical
information may be used and disclosed when necessary to prevent a serious threat
to your health and safety and that of the public or another person. Any
disclosure, however, would only be to someone able to help prevent the threat.
- Health Oversight Activities. Your medical information may
be disclosed to a health oversight agency for activities authorized by law.
These oversight activities include, for example, audits, investigations,
inspections, and licensure. These activities are necessary for the government to
monitor the health care system, government programs, and compliance with civil
rights laws.
SPECIAL SITUATIONS:
- Organ and Tissue Donation. If you are an organ or tissue
donor, your medical information may be released to organizations that handle
organ procurement or organ, eye and tissue transplantation or to an organ
donation bank, as necessary to facilitate organ or tissue donation and
transplantation.
Medical Devices. Your social security number and other
required information will be released in accordance with federal laws and
regulations to the manufacturer of any medical device(s) you have implanted or
explanted during this hospitalization and to the Food and Drug Administration,
if applicable. This information may be used to locate you should there be a need
with regard to such medical device(s).
- Military and Veterans. If you are a member of the armed
forces, your medical information may be released as required by military command
authorities. If you are a member of the foreign military personnel, your medical
information may be released to the appropriate foreign military authority.
- Workers' Compensation. If you seek treatment for a
work-related illness or injury , we must provide full information in accordance
with state-specific laws regarding workers' compensation claims. Once
state-specific requirements are met and an appropriate written request is
received, only the records pertaining to the work-related illness or injury may
be disclosed.
- Public Health Risk. Your medical information may be used
and disclosed for public health activities. These activities generally include
the following:
- To prevent or control disease, injury or disability;
- To report births and deaths;
- To report child abuse or neglect
- To report reactions to medications or problems with products;
- To notify people of recalls of products they may be using;
- To notify a person who may have been exposed to a disease or may be at risk
for contracting or spreading a disease or condition;
- To notify the appropriate government authority if we believe a patient has
been the victim of abuse, neglect or domestic violence. We will only make this
disclosure if you agree or when required or authorized by law.
- Coroners, Medical Examiners, and Funeral Directors. Your
medical information may be released to a coroner or medical examiner. This may
be necessary, for example, to identify a deceased person or determine the cause
of death. We may also release medical information about patients of the facility
to funeral directors as necessary to carry out their duties.
- Inmates. If you are an inmate of a correctional institution
or under the custody of a law enforcement official, we may release medical
information about you to the correctional institution or law enforcement
official. This release would be necessary for the following reasons:
- For the institution to provide you with health care;
- To protect the health and safety of you and others;
- For the safety and security of the correctional institution.
ADDITIONAL SITUATIONS:
Other Uses of Medical Information. Other uses and
disclosures of medical information not covered by this notice or the laws that
apply to this facility will be made only with your written permission. If you
provide the facility permission to use or disclose your medical information, you
may revoke that permission, in writing, at any time. If you revoke your
permission, we will no longer use or disclose your medical information for the
reasons covered in your written authorization. You understand that we are unable
to take back any disclosures already made with your permission, and that we are
required to retain our records of the care that the facility provided to you.
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CONCERNING THIS NOTICE:
- Changes To This Notice. We reserve the right to change this
notice and make the revised or changed notice effective for medical information
we already have about you as well as any information we receive in the future.
The facility will post a current copy of the notice with the effective date. In
addition, each time you register at, or are admitted to, the facility for
treatment or health care services as an inpatient or outpatient, we will offer
you a copy of the current notice in effect.
- Complaints. You will not be penalized for filing a complaint.
If you believe your privacy rights have been violated, you may file a complaint
with the facility or with the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human
Services. To file a complaint with the facility, contact the Chief Nursing
Officer (CNO). All complaints must be submitted in writing.
YOUR RIGHTS REGARDING YOUR MEDICAL INFORMATION You
have the following rights regarding medical information the facility maintains
about you:
** NOTE: All Requests Must Be Submitted in Writing to the
Facility Medical Records Department.
- Right to Inspect and Copy. You have the right to inspect
and copy medical information that may be used to make decisions about your care.
Except where individual state laws are more stringent, this facility has a
minimum of 30 days to act on your request.
To inspect and copy medical
information that may be used to make decisions about you, you must submit a
written request. If you request a copy of the information, we may charge a fee
for the cost of copying, mailing or other supplies associated with your request.
We may deny your request to inspect and copy in some limited circumstances. If
you are denied access to medical information, you may request that the denial be
reviewed. Another licensed health care professional, other than the person who
denied your request, will be chosen by the facility to review your request and
the denial. The facility will comply with the outcome of the review.
A licensed health care professional has determined, in the exercise of
professional judgment, that the access requested is reasonably likely to
endanger the life or physical safety of the individual or another person.
- The protected health information makes reference to another person (unless
such other person is a health care provider) and a licensed health care
professional has determined, in the exercise of professional judgment, that the
access requested is reasonably likely to cause substantial harm to such other
person.
- The request for access is made by the individual's personal representative,
and a licensed health care professional has determined, in the exercise of
professional judgment, that the provision of access to such personal
representative is reasonably likely to cause substantial harm to the individual
or another person.
- Right to Amend. If you feel that medical information we
have about you is incorrect or incomplete, you may ask us to amend the
information. You have the right to request an amendment to information kept by
or for the facility. Except where individual state laws are more stringent, this
facility has a minimum of 60 days to act on your request.
To request an
amendment, your must submit a written request. You must also provide a reason
that supports your request.
- Your request for an amendment may be denied if:
- Your request is not in writing or does not include a reason to support the
request;
- The medical information was not created by us, unless the person or entity
that created the information is no longer available to make the amendment;
The medical information is not part of the medical information kept by or for
the facility;
- The medical information is not part of the information you would be
permitted to inspect and copy; or
- The medical information is accurate and complete.
- Right to an Accounting of Disclosures. You have the right
to request an "accounting of disclosures." This is a list of the disclosures we
made of your medical information for purposes other than treatment, payment and
health care operations. Except where individual state laws are more stringent,
this facility has a minimum of 60 days to act on your request.
- To request this list or accounting of disclosures:
- You must submit your request in writing.
- Your request must state a time period, which may not be longer than six
years and may not include dates before April 14, 2003.
- Your request should indicate in what form you want the list (for example, on
paper, electronically)
The first list you request within a12-month period
will be free. For additional lists, we may charge you for the costs of providing
the list. We will notify you of the cost involved and you may choose to withdraw
or modify your request at that time before any costs are incurred.
- Right to Request Restrictions. You have the right to
request a restriction or limitation on the medical information we use or
disclose about you for treatment, payment or health care operations. You also
have the right to request a limit on the medical information we disclose about
you to someone who is involved in your care or the payment for your care, like a
family member.
For example: You could ask that we not use or
disclose information about a surgery you had.
We are not required to agree to your request. If we
do agree, we will comply with your request unless the information is needed to
provide you emergency treatment.
To request restrictions, you must make your request in writing. In your
request, you must tell us:
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- What information you want to limit;
- Whether you want to limit our use, disclosure or both;
- To whom you want the limits to apply, for example, disclosures to your
spouse.
- Right to Request Confidential Communication. You have the
right to request that we communicate with you about medical matters in a certain
way or at a certain location.
For example: You can ask that we
only contact you at work or by mail.
To request confidential
communications, you must make your request in writing. We will not ask you the
reason for your request. We will accommodate all reasonable requests. Your
request must specify how or where you wish to be contacted.
- Right to a Paper Copy of This Notice. You have the right to
a copy of this notice. You may ask us to give you a copy at any time. Even if
you have agreed to receive this notice electronically, you are still entitiled
to a paper copy of this notice.
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