The Privacy Rule §164.502(G)(3)(i) Uses and disclosures of protected health information: general rules state that under the law, a parent guardian, or other person acting in loco parentis has authority to act on behalf of an individual who is an unemancipated minor AND the covered entity must treat this person as a personal representative.
However, if the minor has the authority to act as an individual related to health care service, the minor may consent not only to the health care service, and records are maintained but also the minor can request or deny access to the personal representative. So, in this case, either there was no denial of access to the parent, or Peter was an emancipated minor. However, in either case, staff must be trained in the regulations that govern the Privacy Rule and its future changes. Requires a bit of information, no?
Directly from the most prominent HIPAA authority I know:
“After the HITECH Act and the Omnibus Rule, all the attention went to the HIPAA Security Rule, and rightfully so. But lost in all that is that the public policy reason for the security is privacy. Privacy of confidential information including patient data, intellectual property, military defense secrets, etc. The changes to the HIPAA Privacy Rule are a wake-up call to the healthcare industry, get your act together or be prepared to pay a price. Over the last year, OCR has already shown a willingness to impose stiff CMPs for those organizations that fail to provide PHI in a timely manner to patients.
Something (or someone) snapped in Washington and came to the realization that without patient involvement we are never going to transition healthcare from a sickness system to a wellness system. Our current approach is unsustainable and will lead to disastrous unintended consequences. Witness the COVID pandemic. We have no way of knowing how often these will occur at this scale. OK, the Spanish Flu was about a hundred years ago but that is a single data point. What about Ebola, HIV, the return of malaria, etc., etc. These never reached the same scale, but they could have.
The reason for going into a public policy discussion is that if the law changes slow, healthcare, the most insular industry in the U.S., changes even slower. It is woefully unprepared for a shift to a consumer-centric orientation. Most compliance budgets are significantly underwater dealing with the current challenges, let alone something that shifts the paradigm right under its feet.”
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This is just one example of the complexity and processes associated with the existing PR.
However, PR compliance efforts may be severely impacted by changes in the future regardless of the Regime. There will be new regulations, changes to regulations, slightly modified regulations, and perhaps deleted ones. Each of these changes will require that organizations re-train their workers and put new policies and procedures in place to remain compliant with the regime.
We will be working on a new Privacy Assessment for Expresso as well as other HIPAA Survival Guide content/product updates. We plan to have an informative webinar on these HIPAA PR changes in June as mentioned above. We hope you will join us!