CHARLES
E. MOGGIA D.D.S.
HEALTH INFORMATION PRIVACY
POLICIES & PROCEDURES
These Health Information
Privacy Policies & Procedures implement our obligations
to protect the privacy of individually identifiable health
information that we create, receive, or maintain as a healthcare
provider.
We implement these
Health Information Privacy Policies and Procedures as a matter
of sound business practice; to protect the interests of our
patients; and to fulfill our legal obligations under the Health
Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (“HIPAA”),
its implementing regulations at 45 CFR Parts 160 and 164 (65
Fed. Reg 82462 (Dec. 28, 2000)) (“Privacy Rules”),
as amended (67 Fed. Reg. 53182 [Aug. 14, 2002]), and state
law that provides greater protection or rights to patients
than the Privacy Rules.
As a member of
our workforce or as our Business Associate, you are obligated
to follow these Health Information Privacy Policies &
Procedures faithfully. Failure to do so can result in disciplinary
action, including termination of your employment or affiliation
with us.
These Policies
& Procedures address the basics of HIPAA and the Privacy
Rules that apply in our dental practice. They do not attempt
to cover everything in the Privacy Rules. The Policies &
Procedures sometimes refer to forms we use to help implement
the policies and to the Privacy Rules themselves when added
detail may be needed.
Please note that
while the Privacy Rules speak in terms of “individual”
rights and actions, these Policies & Procedures use the
more familiar word “patient” instead; “patient”
should be read broadly to include prospective patients, patients
of record, former patients, their authorized representatives,
and any other “individuals” contemplated in the
Privacy Rules.
If you have questions
or doubts about any use or disclosure of individually identifiable
health information or about your other obligations under these
Health Information Privacy Policies & Procedures, the
Privacy Rules or other federal or state law, consult Laura
– at (408) 578-5911 or by E-mail at laura@drmoggia.com,
before you act.
Charles
E. Moggia D.D.S.
1. General
Rule: No Use or Disclosure
Our dental office must not use or disclose protected health
information (PHI), except as these Privacy Policies &
Procedures permit or require.
2. Acknowledgement
and Optional Consent
Our dental office will make a good faith effort to obtain
a written acknowledgement of receipt of our Notice of Privacy
Practices (see Section 9) from a patient before we use or
disclose his or her protected health information (PHI) for
treatment, to obtain payment for that treatment, or for our
healthcare operations (TPO).
Our dental office’s
use or disclosure of PHI for our payment activities and healthcare
operations may be subject to the minimum necessary requirements
(see Section 7).
Our dental office
will become familiar with our state’s privacy laws.
If required by our state law, or as directed by the dentist,
we will also seek Consent from a patient before we use or
disclose PHI for TPO purposes – in addition to obtaining
an Acknowledgement of receipt of our Notice of Privacy Practices.
a) Obtaining
Consent – If consent is to be obtained, upon
the individual’s first visit as a patient (or next visit
if already a patient), our dental office will request and
obtain the patient’s written Consent for our use and
disclosure of the patient’s PHI for treatment, payment,
and healthcare operations.
Any consent we
obtain must be on our Consent form, which we may not alter
in any way. Our dental office will include the signed Consent
form in the patient’s chart.
b) Exceptions
– Our dental office does not have to obtain the patient’s
Consent in emergency treatment situations; when treatment
is required by law; or when communications barriers prevent
Consent.
c) Consent
Revocation – A patient from whom we obtain
consent may revoke it at any time by written notice. Our dental
office will include the revocation in the patient’s
chart. There is space at the bottom of our Consent form where
the patient can revoke the consent.
d) Applicability
– Consent for use or disclosure of PHI should not be
confused with informed consent for dental treatment. This
section applies to our practice.
3. Authorization
In some cases we must have proper, written Authorization from
the patient (or the patient’s personal representative)
before we use or disclose a patient’s PHI for any purpose
(except for TPO purposes) or as permitted or required without
consent or authorization (see Sections 3, 4, or 5).
Our dental office
will use the Authorization form. We will always act in strict
accordance with an Authorization.
a) Authorization
Revocation – A patient may revoke an authorization
at any time by written notice. Our dental office will not
rely on an Authorization we know has been revoked.
b) Authorization
from Another Provider – Our dental office will
use or disclose PHI as permitted by a valid Authorization
we receive from another healthcare provider.
Our dental office
may rely on that covered entity to have requested only the
minimum necessary protected PHI. Therefore, our dental office
will not make our own “minimum necessary” determination,
unless we know that the Authorization is incomplete, contains
false information, has been revoked, or has expired.
c) Authorization
Expiration – Our dental office will not rely
on an Authorization we know has expired.
4. Oral
Agreement
Our dental office may use or disclose a patient’s PHI
with the patient’s Oral Agreement or if the patient
is unavailable subject to all applicable requirements.
Our dental office
may use professional judgment and our experience with common
practice to make reasonable inferences of the patient’s
best interest in allowing a person to act on behalf of the
patient to pick up dental/medical supplies, X-rays, or other
similar forms of PHI.
5. Permitted
Without Acknowledgement, Consent Authorization or
Oral Agreement
Our dental office may use or disclose a patient’s PHI
in certain situations, without Authorization or Oral Agreement.
In our dental office, these disclosures are not likely to
be frequent.
a) Verification
of Identity – Our dental office will always
verify the identity of any patient, and the identity and authority
of any patient’s personal representative, government
or law enforcement official, or other person, unknown to us,
who requests PHI before we will disclose the PHI to that person.
Our dental office
will obtain appropriate identification and, if the person
is not the patient, evidence of authority. Examples of appropriate
identification include photographic identification card, government
identification card or badge, and appropriate document on
government letterhead. Our dental office will document the
incident and how we responded.
b) Uses
or Disclosures Permitted under this Section 5 –
The situations in which our dental office is permitted to
use or disclose PHI in accordance with the procedures set
out in this Section 5 are listed below.
- Our dental office
may disclose a patient’s PHI to that patient on request.
- Our dental office
may disclose to a patient’s personal representative
PHI relevant to the representative capacity. We will not
disclose to a personal representative we reasonably believe
may be abusive to a patient any PHI we reasonably believe
may promote or further such abuse.
- Our dental office
will not use or disclose a patient’s PHI for fundraising
purposes without the patient’s Authorization.
- Our dental office
will not use or disclose PHI for marketing without a patient’s
Authorization unless the marketing is in the form of a promotional
gift of nominal value that we provide, or face-to-face communications
between us and the patient.
- Our dental office
may use or disclose PHI in the following types of situations,
provided procedures specified in the Privacy Rules are followed:
- For public
health activities;
- To health
oversight agencies;
- To coroners,
medical examiners, and funeral directors;
- To employers
regarding work-related illness or injury;
- To the
military;
- To federal
officials for lawful intelligence, counterintelligence,
and national security activities;
- To correctional
institutions regarding inmates;
- In response
to subpoenas and other lawful judicial processes;
- To law
enforcement officials;
- To report
abuse, neglect, or domestic violence;
- As required
by law;
- As part
of research projects; and
- As authorized
by state worker’s compensation laws.
6. Required
Disclosures
Our dental office will disclose protected health information
(PHI) to a patient (or to the patient’s personal representative)
to the extent that the patient has a right of access to the
PHI (see Section 10); and to the U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services (HHS) on request for complaint investigation
or compliance review.
Our dental office
will use the disclosure log to document each disclosure we
make to HHS.
7. Minimum
Necessary
Our dental office will make reasonable efforts to disclose,
or request of another covered entity, only the minimum necessary
protected health information (PHI) to accomplish the intended
purpose.
There is no minimum
necessary requirement for disclosures to or requests by one
another in our dental office or by a healthcare provider for
treatment; permitted or required disclosures to, or for disclosure
requested and authorized by, a patient; disclosures to HHS
for compliance reviews or complaint investigations; disclosures
required by law; or uses or disclosures required for compliance
with the HIPAA Administrative Simplification Rules.
a) Routine
or Recurring Requests or Disclosures – Our
dental office will follow the policies and procedures that
we adopt to limit our routine or recurring requests for our
disclosures of PHI to the minimum reasonably necessary for
the purpose.
b) Non-Routine
or Non-Recurring Requests or Disclosures –
No non-routine or non-recurring request for or disclosure
of PHI will be made until it has been reviewed on a patient-by-patient
basis against our criteria to ensure that only the minimum
necessary PHI for the purpose is requested or disclosed.
c) Other’s
Requests – Our dental office will rely, if
reasonable for the situation, on a request to disclose PHI
being for the minimum necessary, if the requester is: (a)
a covered entity; (b) a professional (including an attorney
or accountant) who provides professional services to our practice,
either as a member of our workforce or as our Business Associate,
and who represents that the requested information is the minimum
necessary; (c) a public official who represents that the information
requested is the minimum necessary; or (d) a researcher presenting
appropriate documentation or making appropriate representations
that the research satisfies the applicable requirements of
the Privacy Rules.
d) Entire
Record – Our dental office will not use, disclose,
or request an entire record, except as permitted in these
Policies & Procedures or standard protocols that we adopt
reflecting situations when it is necessary.
e) Minimum
Necessary Workforce Use – Our dental office
will use only the minimum necessary PHI needed to perform
our duties.
8. Business
Associates
Our dental office will obtain satisfactory assurance in the
form of a written contract that our Business Associates will
appropriately safeguard and limit their use and disclosure
of the protected health information (PHI) we disclose to them.
These Business
Associate requirements are not applicable to our disclosures
to a healthcare provider for treatment purposes. The Business
Associate Contract Terms document contains the terms that
federal law requires be included in each Business Associate
Contract.
a) Breach
by Business Associate – If our dental office
learns that a Business Associate has materially breached or
violated its Business Associate Contract with us, we will
take prompt, reasonable steps to see that the breach or violation
is cured.
If the Business
Associate does not promptly and effectively cure the breach
or violation, we will terminate our contract with the Business
Associate, or if contract termination is not feasible, report
the Business Associate’s breach or violation to the
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).
9. Notice
of Privacy Practices
Our dental office will maintain a Notice of Privacy Practices
as required by the Privacy Rules.
a) Our
Notice – Our dental office will use and disclose
PHI only in conformance with the contents of our Notice of
Privacy Practices. We will promptly revise a Notice of Privacy
Practices whenever there is a material change to our uses
or disclosures of PHI to legal duties, to the patients’
rights or to other privacy practices that render the statements
in that Notice no longer accurate.
Form 1, Notice
of Privacy Practices, found in this Privacy Kit, contains
the terms that federal law requires.
b) Distribution
of Our Notice – Our dental office will provide
our Notice of Privacy Practices to any person who requests
it, and to each patient no later than the date of our first
service delivery after April 14, 2003.
Our dental office
will have our Notice of Privacy Practices available for patients
to take with them. We will also post our Notice of Privacy
Practices in a clear and prominent location where it is reasonable
to expect patients seeking services from us will be able to
read the Notice.
c) Acknowledgement
of Notice – Our dental office will make a good
faith effort to obtain from the patient a written Acknowledgement
of receipt of our Notice of Privacy Practices.
Our dental office
shall use Form 2, Acknowledgement of Receipt of Notice of
Privacy Practices, found in this Privacy Kit, to obtain the
Acknowledgement. If we cannot obtain written Acknowledgement
from the patient, we will use the form to document our attempt
and the reason why written Acknowledgement was not signed
by the patient.
10. Patients’
Rights
Our dental office will honor the rights of patients regarding
their PHI.
a) Access
– With rare exceptions, our dental office must permit
patients to request access to the PHI we or our Business Associates
hold.
No PHI will be
withheld from a patient seeking access unless we confirm that
the information may be withheld according to the Privacy Rules.
We may offer to provide a summary of the information in the
chart. The patient must agree in advance to receive a summary
and to any fee we will charge for providing the summary. Our
dental office will contact our Business Associates to retrieve
any PHI they may have on the patient.
b) Amendment
– Patients have the right to request to amend their
PHI and other records for as long as our dental office maintains
them.
Our dental office
may deny a request to amend PHI or records if: (a) we did
not create the information (unless the patient provides us
a reasonable basis to believe that the originator is not available
to act on a request to amend); (b) we believe the information
is accurate and complete; or (c) we do not have the information.
Our dental office
will follow all procedures required by the Privacy Rules for
denial or approval of amendment requests. We will not, however,
physically alter or delete existing notes in a patient’s
chart. We will inform the patient when we agree to make an
amendment, and we will contact our Business Associates to
help assure that any PHI they have on the patient is appropriately
amended. We will contact any individuals whom the patient
requests we alert to any amendment to the patient’s
PHI. We will also contact any individuals or entities of which
we are aware that we have sent erroneous or incomplete information
and who may have acted on the erroneous or incomplete information
to the detriment of the patient.
When we deny a
request for an amendment, we will mark any future disclosures
of the contested information in a way acknowledging the contest.
c) Disclosure
Accounting – Patients have the right to an
accounting of certain disclosures our dental office made of
their PHI within the 6 years prior to their request. Each
disclosure we make, that is not for treatment payment or healthcare
operations, must be documented showing the date of the disclosure,
what was disclosed, the purpose of the disclosure, and the
name and (if known) address of each person or entity to whom
the disclosure was made. The Authorization or other documentation
must be included in the patient’s record. We use the
patient’s chart to track each disclosure of PHI as needed
to enable us to fulfill our obligation to account for these
disclosures.
We are not required
to account for disclosures we made: (a) before April 14, 2003;
(b) to the patient (or the patient’s personal representative);
(c) to or for notification of persons involved in a patient’s
healthcare or payment for healthcare; (d) for treatment, payment,
or healthcare operations; (e) for national security or intelligence
purposes; (f) to correctional institutions or law enforcement
officials regarding inmates; or (g) according to an Authorization
signed by the patient or the patient’s representative;
(h) incident to another permitted or required use disclosure.
We will temporarily
suspend the accounting of any disclosure when requested to
do so pursuant according to the Privacy Rules by health oversight
agencies or law enforcement officials. We may charge for any
accounting that is more frequent than every 12 months, provided
the patient is informed of the fee before the accounting is
provided. We will contact our Business Associates to assure
we include in the accounting any disclosures made by them
for which we must account.
d) Restriction
on Use or Disclosure – Patients have the right
to request our dental office to restrict use or disclosure
of their PHI, including for treatment, payment, or healthcare
operations. We have no obligation to agree to the request,
but if we do, we will comply with our agreement (except in
an appropriate dental/medical emergency).
We may terminate
an agreement restricting use or disclosure of PHI by a written
notice of termination to the patient. We will contact our
Business Associates whenever we agree to such a restriction
to inform the Business Associate of the restriction and its
obligations to abide by the restriction. We will document
in the patient’s chart any such agreed to restrictions.
e) Alternative
Communications – Patients have the right to
request us to use alternative means or alternative locations
when communicating PHI to them. Our dental office will accommodate
a patient’s request for such alternative communications
if the request is reasonable and in writing.
Our dental office
will inform the patient of our decision to accommodate or
deny such a request. If we agree to such a request, we will
inform our Business Associates of the agreement and provide
them with the information necessary to comply with the agreement.
f) Applicability
– Our dental office will be aware of and respect
these patients’ rights regarding their PHI, even though
in most situations patients are unlikely to exercise them.
11. Staff
Training and Management, Complaint Procedures, Data Safeguards,
Administrative Practices
a) Staff
Training and Management
* Training – Our dental office will train all
members of our workforce in these Privacy Policies & Procedures,
as necessary and appropriate for them to carry out their functions.
We will complete the privacy training of our existing workforce
by April 14, 2003.
After April 14,
2003, our dental office will train each new staff member within
a reasonable time after the member starts. We will also retain
each staff member whose functions are affected either by a
material change in our Privacy Policies and Procedures or
in the member’s job functions, within a reasonable time
after the change.
Form 7, Staff Review
of Policies and Procedures, can be used to have workforce
members acknowledge they have received and read a copy of
these Policies and Procedures.
*Discipline
and Mitigation – Our dental office will develop,
document, disseminate, and implement appropriate discipline
policies for staff members who violate our Privacy Policies
& Procedures, the Privacy Rules, or other applicable federal
or state privacy law.
Staff members who
violate our Privacy Policies & Procedures, the Privacy
Rules or other applicable federal or state privacy law will
be subject to disciplinary action, possibly up to and including
termination of employment.
b) Complaints
– Our dental office will implement procedures for patients
to complain about our compliance with our Privacy Policies
and Procedures or the Privacy Rules. We will also implement
procedures to investigate and resolve such complaints.
The Complaint form
can be used by the patient to lodge the complaint. Each complaint
received must be referred to management immediately for investigation
and resolution. We will not retaliate against any patient
or workforce member who files a Complaint in good faith.
c) Data
Safeguards – Our dental office will “add
to” and strengthen these Privacy Policies & Procedures
with such additional data security policies and procedures
as are needed to have reasonable and appropriate administrative,
technical, and physical safeguards in place to ensure the
integrity and confidentiality of the PHI we maintain.
Our dental office
will take reasonable steps to limit incidental uses and disclosures
of PHI made according to an otherwise permitted or required
use or disclosure.
d) Documentation
and Record Retention – Our dental office will
maintain in written or electronic form all documentation required
by the Privacy Rules for six years from the date of creation
or when the document was last in effect, whichever is greater.
e) Privacy
Policies & Procedures – Only Charles E.
Moggia D.D.S. may change these Privacy Policies & Procedures.
12. State
Law Compliance
Our dental office will comply with the privacy laws of each
state that has jurisdiction over our practice, or its actions
involving protected health information (PHI), that provide
greater protections or rights to patients than the Privacy
Rules.
13. HHS
Enforcement
Our dental office will give the U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services (HHS) access to our facilities, books,
records, accounts, and other information sources (including
individually identifiable health information without patient
authorization or notice) during normal business hours (or
at other times without notice if HHS presents appropriate
lawful administrative or judicial process).
We will cooperate
with any compliance review or complaint investigation by HHS,
while preserving the rights of our practice.
14. Designated
Personnel
Our dental office will designate a Privacy Officer and other
responsible persons as required by the Privacy Rules.
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