

Fact Sheet
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Monday, April 14, 2003 |
Contact: HHS Press Office (202)
690-6343 |
PROTECTING THE PRIVACY OF PATIENTS' HEALTH INFORMATION
OVERVIEW
The first-ever federal privacy standards to
protect patients' medical records and other health information provided to
health plans, doctors, hospitals and other health care providers took
effect on April 14, 2003. Developed by the Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS), these new standards provide patients with access to their
medical records and more control over how their personal health
information is used and disclosed. They represent a uniform, federal floor
of privacy protections for consumers across the country. State laws
providing additional protections to consumers are not affected by this new
rule.
Congress called on HHS to issue patient privacy protections as part
of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996
(HIPAA). HIPAA included provisions designed to encourage electronic
transactions and also required new safeguards to protect the security and
confidentiality of health information. The final regulation covers health
plans, health care clearinghouses, and those health care providers who
conduct certain financial and administrative transactions (e.g.,
enrollment, billing and eligibility verification) electronically. Most
health insurers, pharmacies, doctors and other health care providers were
required to comply with these federal standards beginning April 14, 2003.
As provided by Congress, certain small health plans have an additional
year to comply. HHS has conducted extensive outreach and provided guidance
and technical assistant to these providers and businesses to make it as
easy as possible for them to implement the new privacy protections. These
efforts include answers to hundreds of common questions about the rule, as
well as explanations and descriptions about key elements of the rule.
These materials are available at http://www.hhs.gov/ocr/hipaa/.
PATIENT PROTECTIONS
The new privacy regulations ensure a national floor of privacy
protections for patients by limiting the ways that health plans,
pharmacies, hospitals and other covered entities can use patients'
personal medical information. The regulations protect medical records and
other individually identifiable health information, whether it is on
paper, in computers or communicated orally. Key provisions of these new
standards include:
- Access To Medical Records. Patients generally should be able
to see and obtain copies of their medical records and request
corrections if they identify errors and mistakes. Health plans, doctors,
hospitals, clinics, nursing homes and other covered entities generally
should provide access these records within 30 days and may charge
patients for the cost of copying and sending the records.
- Notice of Privacy Practices. Covered health plans, doctors
and other health care providers must provide a notice to their patients
how they may use personal medical information and their rights under the
new privacy regulation. Doctors, hospitals and other direct-care
providers generally will provide the notice on the patient's first visit
following the April 14, 2003, compliance date and upon request. Patients
generally will be asked to sign, initial or otherwise acknowledge that
they received this notice. Health plans generally must mail the notice
to their enrollees by April 14 and again if the notice changes
significantly. Patients also may ask covered entities to restrict the
use or disclosure of their information beyond the practices included in
the notice, but the covered entities would not have to agree to the
changes.
- Limits on Use of Personal Medical Information. The privacy
rule sets limits on how health plans and covered providers may use
individually identifiable health information. To promote the best
quality care for patients, the rule does not restrict the ability of
doctors, nurses and other providers to share information needed to treat
their patients. In other situations, though, personal health information
generally may not be used for purposes not related to health care, and
covered entities may use or share only the minimum amount of protected
information needed for a particular purpose. In addition, patients would
have to sign a specific authorization before a covered entity could
release their medical information to a life insurer, a bank, a marketing
firm or another outside business for purposes not related to their
health care.
- Prohibition on Marketing. The final privacy rule sets new
restrictions and limits on the use of patient information for marketing
purposes. Pharmacies, health plans and other covered entities must first
obtain an individual's specific authorization before disclosing their
patient information for marketing. At the same time, the rule permits
doctors and other covered entities to communicate freely with patients
about treatment options and other health-related information, including
disease-management programs.
- Stronger State Laws. The new federal privacy standards do not
affect state laws that provide additional privacy protections for
patients. The confidentiality protections are cumulative; the privacy
rule will set a national "floor" of privacy standards that protect all
Americans, and any state law providing additional protections would
continue to apply. When a state law requires a certain disclosure --
such as reporting an infectious disease outbreak to the public health
authorities -- the federal privacy regulations would not preempt the
state law.
- Confidential communications. Under the privacy rule, patients
can request that their doctors, health plans and other covered entities
take reasonable steps to ensure that their communications with the
patient are confidential. For example, a patient could ask a doctor to
call his or her office rather than home, and the doctor's office should
comply with that request if it can be reasonably accommodated.
- Complaints. Consumers may file a formal complaint regarding
the privacy practices of a covered health plan or provider. Such
complaints can be made directly to the covered provider or health plan
or to HHS' Office for Civil Rights (OCR), which is charged with
investigating complaints and enforcing the privacy regulation.
Information about filing complaints should be included in each covered
entity's notice of privacy practices. Consumers can find out more
information about filing a complaint at http://www.hhs.gov/ocr/hipaa/
or by calling (866) 627-7748.
HEALTH PLANS AND PROVIDERS
The privacy rule requires health plans, pharmacies, doctors and other
covered entities to establish policies and procedures to protect the
confidentiality of protected health information about their patients.
These requirements are flexible and scalable to allow different covered
entities to implement them as appropriate for their businesses or
practices. Covered entities must provide all the protections for patients
cited above, such as providing a notice of their privacy practices and
limiting the use and disclosure of information as required under the rule.
In addition, covered entities must take some additional steps to protect
patient privacy:
- Written Privacy Procedures. The rule requires covered
entities to have written privacy procedures, including a description of
staff that has access to protected information, how it will be used and
when it may be disclosed. Covered entities generally must take steps to
ensure that any business associates who have access to protected
information agree to the same limitations on the use and disclosure of
that information.
- Employee Training and Privacy Officer. Covered entities must
train their employees in their privacy procedures and must designate an
individual to be responsible for ensuring the procedures are followed.
If covered entities learn an employee failed to follow these procedures,
they must take appropriate disciplinary action.
- Public Responsibilities. In limited circumstances, the final
rule permits -- but does not require --covered entities to continue
certain existing disclosures of health information for specific public
responsibilities. These permitted disclosures include: emergency
circumstances; identification of the body of a deceased person, or the
cause of death; public health needs; research that involves limited data
or has been independently approved by an Institutional Review Board or
privacy board; oversight of the health care system; judicial and
administrative proceedings; limited law enforcement activities; and
activities related to national defense and security. The privacy rule
generally establishes new safeguards and limits on these disclosures.
Where no other law requires disclosures in these situations, covered
entities may continue to use their professional judgment to decide
whether to make such disclosures based on their own policies and ethical
principles.
- Equivalent Requirements For Government. The provisions of the
final rule generally apply equally to private sector and public sector
covered entities. For example, private hospitals and government-run
hospitals covered by the rule have to comply with the full range of
requirements.
OUTREACH AND ENFORCEMENT
HHS' Office for Civil Rights (OCR) oversees and enforces the new
federal privacy regulations. Led by OCR, HHS has issued extensive guidance
and technical assistance materials to make it as easy as possible for
covered entities to comply with the new requirements. Key elements of
OCR's outreach and enforcement efforts include:
- Guidance and technical assistance materials. HHS has issued
extensive guidance and technical materials to explain the privacy rule,
including an extensive, searchable collection of frequently asked
questions that address major aspects of the rule. HHS will continue to
expand and update these materials to further assist covered entities in
complying. These materials are available at http://www.hhs.gov/ocr/hipaa/assist.html.
- Conferences and seminars. HHS has participated in hundreds of
conferences, trade association meetings and conference calls to explain
and clarify the provisions of the privacy regulation. These included a
series of regional conferences sponsored by HHS, as well as many held by
professional associations and trade groups. HHS will continue these
outreach efforts to encourage compliance with the privacy
requirements.
- Information line. To help covered entities find out
information about the privacy regulation and other administrative
simplification provisions of the Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act of 1996, OCR and HHS' Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services have established a toll-free information line. The
number is (866) 627-7748.
- Complaint investigations. Enforcement will be primarily
complaint-driven. OCR will investigate complaints and work to make sure
that consumers receive the privacy rights and protections required under
the new regulations. When appropriate, OCR can impose civil monetary
penalties for violations of the privacy rule provisions. Potential
criminal violations of the law would be referred to the U.S. Department
of Justice for further investigation and appropriate action.
- Civil and Criminal Penalties. Congress provided civil and
criminal penalties for covered entities that misuse personal health
information. For civil violations of the standards, OCR may impose
monetary penalties up to $100 per violation, up to $25,000 per year, for
each requirement or prohibition violated. Criminal penalties apply for
certain actions such as knowingly obtaining protected health information
in violation of the law. Criminal penalties can range up to $50,000 and
one year in prison for certain offenses; up to $100,000 and up to five
years in prison if the offenses are committed under "false pretenses";
and up to $250,000 and up to 10 years in prison if the offenses are
committed with the intent to sell, transfer or use protected health
information for commercial advantage, personal gain or malicious harm.
