bstone
Forum Deputy Chief
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HIPPA violation>
There is no such thing as a "HIPPA violation".
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HIPPA violation>
There is no such thing as a "HIPPA violation".
please see edited post for "?"
please see edited post for "?"
My reply remains the same. There is no such thing as a "HIPPA violation".
From the HIPPA page of the Dept of Health and Human Services Website hhs.gov (capitals added)
How To File a Complaint
If you believe that a covered entity violated your (or someone else’s) health information privacy rights or committed another VIOLATION of the Privacy or Security Rule, you may file a complaint with OCR. OCR can investigate complaints against covered entities.
Again, it's HIPAA, not HIPPA.
As well, there is no HIPAA violation anywhere in these posts. No personal information has been released. I am a HIPAA complaint EMS provider and guard the privacy of my patients zealously. If you were to ask me if so-and-so was ever a patient of mine I would refuse to even respond to your question. If you were to ask me if I ever preformed an intervention on a patient who you somehow was able to determine was once under my care I would continue to refuse to answer the question. However, talking about the care of a patient in the abstract and without stating any identifying features of the patient is perfectly complaint with HIPAA. If it wasn't then a large chunk of the posts on this forum would have to be deleted.
I thought we were talking, theoretically, about a bystander riding along in the back with a pt?
Even so, are the systems where this would be likely to occur be considered "covered entities"?
Also, "treatment, billing, and health care operations."
I don't know about every agency in the US. I know my employer bills, and processes info electronically, so as far as I am concerned having a "rider" in this situation would be illegal
I do not think you are correct. A HIPAA trained provider is covered if that individual is a "rider".
but not some bystander
Depends who that bystander is. That patient's husband/wife/child/parent? They are generally covered.
and HIPAA violations do exist