|
It's not to late to get a Flu
Shot, Call for appointment
today 405-722-9474 |
painful ailments,
tired and overworked muscles, reducing stress, rehabilitating sports
injuries, promoting general health......
Ask your provider about
Therapeutic Massage
you'll be glad you did |
| |
|
|
THIS
NOTICE DESCRIBES HOW MEDICAL INFORMATION ABOUT YOU MAY
BE USED AND DISCLOSED AND HOW YOU CAN GET ACCESS TO THIS
INFORMATION. PLEASE REVIEW IT CAREFULLY.
Putnam
North
Family
Medical
Center
Notice of
Information Practices
Understanding Your
Health Record Information
Each time you visit a hospital, a
physician, or another health care provider, the Provider makes a
record of your visit. Typically, this record contains your health
history, current symptoms, examination and test results, diagnoses,
treatment, and plan for future care or treatment. This information,
often referred to as your medical record, serves as the following:
-
Basis for
planning your care and treatment.
-
Means of
communication among the many health professionals who contribute
to your care.
-
Legal document
describing the care that you received.
-
Means by which
you or a third-party payer can verify that you actually received
the services billed for.
-
Tool in
medical education.
-
Source of
information for public health officials charged with improving
the health of the regions they serve.
-
Tool to assess
the appropriateness and quality of care that you received.
-
Tool to
improve the quality of health care and achieve better patient
outcomes.
Understanding what is in your
health records and how your health information is used and how it
helps you to--
-
Ensure its
accuracy and completeness.
-
Understand
who, what, where, why, and how others may access your health
information.
-
Make informed
decisions about authorizing disclosure to others.
-
Better
understand the health information rights detailed below.
Your Rights Under the Federal Privacy
Standard
Although your health records are
the physical property of the health care provider who completed it,
you have the following rights with regard to the information
contained therein:
-
Request
restriction on uses and disclosures of your health information
for treatment, payment, and health care operations. “Health care
operations” consist of activities that are necessary to carry
out the operations of the provider, such as quality assurance
and peer review. The right to request restriction does not
extend to uses or disclosures permitted or required under the
following sections of the federal privacy regulations: §
164.502(a)(2)(i) (disclosures to
you), 164.510(a) (for facility directories, but note that you
have the right to object to such uses), or 164.512 (uses and
disclosures not requiring a consent or an authorization). The
latter uses and disclosures include, for example, those required
by law, such as mandatory communicable disease reporting. In
those cases, you do not have a right to request restriction. The
consent to use and disclose your individually identifiable
health information provides the ability to request restriction.
We do not, however, have to agree to the restriction. If we do,
we will adhere to it unless you request otherwise or we give you
advance notice. You may also ask us to communicate with you by
alternate means, and if the method of communication is
reasonable, we must grant the alternate communication request.
You may request restriction or alternate communications on the
consent form for treatment, payment, and health care operations.
-
Obtain a copy
of this notice of information practices. Although we have posted
a copy in prominent locations throughout the facility and on our
website, you have a right to a hard copy upon request.
-
Inspect and
copy your health information upon request. Again, this right is
not absolute. In certain situations, such as if access would
cause harm, we can deny access. You do not have a right of
access to the following:
-
Psychotherapy
notes. Such notes consist of those notes that are recorded in
any medium by a health care provider who is a mental health
professional documenting or analyzing a conversation during a
private, group, joint, or family counseling session and that are
separated from the rest of your medical record.
-
Information
compiled in reasonable anticipation of or for use in civil,
criminal, or administrative actions or proceedings.
-
Protected
health information (“PHI”) that is subject to the Clinical
Laboratory Improvement Amendments of 1988 (“CLIA”), 42 U.S.C. §
263a, to the extent that giving you access would be prohibited
by law.
-
Information
that was obtained from someone other than a health care provider
under a promise of confidentiality and the requested access
would be reasonably likely to reveal the source of the
information
In other situations, we may deny you access, but if we do, we
must provide you a review of our decision denying access. These
“reviewable” grounds for denial include the following:
-
A licensed
healthcare professional, such as your attending physician, has
determined, in the exercise of professional judgment, that the
access is reasonably likely to endanger the life or physical
safety of yourself or another person.
-
PHI makes
reference to another person (other than a health care provider)
and a licensed health care provider has determined, in the
exercise of professional judgment, that the access is reasonably
likely to cause substantial harm to such other person.
-
The request is
made by your personal representative and a licensed health care
professional has determined, in the exercise of professional
judgment, that giving access to such personal representative is
reasonably likely to cause substantial harm to you or another
person.
For these reviewable grounds,
another licensed professional must review the decision of the
provider denying access within 60 days. If we deny you access, we
will explain why and what your rights are, including how to seek
review.
If we grant access, we will tell
you what, if anything, you have to do to get access. We reserve the
right to charge a reasonable, cost-based fee for making copies.
-
Request
amendment/correction of your health information. We do not have
to grant the request if the following conditions exist:
-
We did not create the record.
If, as in the case of a consultation report from another
provider, we did not create the record, we cannot know whether
it is accurate or not. Thus, in such cases, you must seek
amendment/correction from the party creating the record. If the
party amends or corrects the record, we will put the corrected
record into our records.
-
The records are not available
to you as discussed immediately above.
-
The record is accurate and
complete.
If we deny your request for
amendment/correction, we will notify you why, how you can attach a
statement of disagreement to your records (which we may rebut), and
how you can complain. If we grant the request, we will make the
correction and distribute the correction to those who need it and
those whom you identify to us that you want to receive the corrected
information.
-
Obtain an accounting of
nonroutine uses and disclosures, those other than for treatment,
payment, and health care operations. We do not need to provide
an accounting for the following disclosures:
-
To you for
disclosures of protected health information to you.
-
For the facility directory or
to persons involved in your care or for other notification
purposes as provided in § 164.510 of the federal privacy
regulations (uses and disclosures requiring an opportunity for
the individual to agree or to object, including notification to
family members, personal representatives, or other persons
responsible for your care, of the your location, general
condition, or death).
-
For national security or
intelligence purposes under § 164.512(k)(2)
of the federal privacy regulations (disclosures not requiring
consent, authorization, or an opportunity to object).
-
To correctional institutions or
law enforcement officials under § 164.512(k)(5)
of the federal privacy regulations (disclosures not requiring
consent, authorization, or an opportunity to object).
-
That occurred before April 14, 2003 .
We must provide the accounting
within 60 days. The accounting must include the following
information:
-
Date of each
disclosure.
-
Name and address of the
organization or person who received the protected health
information.
-
Brief description of the
information disclosed.
-
Brief statement of the purpose
of the disclosure that reasonably informs you of the basis for
the disclosure or, in lieu of such statement, a copy of your
written authorization or a copy of the written request for
disclosure.
The first accounting in any
12-month period is free. Thereafter, we reserve the right to charge
a reasonable, cost-based fee.
-
Revoke your consent or
authorization to use or disclose health information except to
the extent that we have taken action in reliance on the consent
or authorization.
Our
Responsibilities Under the Federal
Privacy Standard
In addition to providing you your
rights, as detailed above, the federal privacy standard requires us
to take the following measures:
-
Maintain the privacy of your
health information, including implementing reasonable and
appropriate physical, administrative, and technical safeguards
to protect the information.
-
Provide you this notice as to
our legal duties and privacy practices with respect to
individually identifiable health information that we collect and
maintain about you.
-
Abide by the terms of this
notice.
-
Train our personnel concerning
privacy and confidentiality.
-
Implement a sanction policy to
discipline those who breach privacy/ confidentiality or our
policies with regard thereto.
-
Mitigate (lessen the harm of)
any breach of privacy/confidentiality.
We will not use or disclose your
health information without your consent or authorization, except as
described in this notice or otherwise required by law.
How to Get More Information or to
Report a Problem
If you have questions and/or would
like additional information, you may contact our Privacy Officer,
Nina at 405-722-9474 ext 136. If you believe that your
rights have been violated, you may file a complaint with our office
or with the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human
Services. All complaints must be in writing. You will not be
penalized for filing a complaint.
Examples of
Disclosures for Treatment, Payment, and Health Operations
-
We will use your health
information for treatment.
Example: A
physician, a physician’s assistant, a therapist or a counselor, a
nurse, or another member of your health care team will record
information in your record to diagnose your condition and determine
the best course of treatment for you. The primary caregiver will
give treatment orders and document what he or she expects other
members of the health care team to do to treat you. Those other
members will then document the actions they took and their
observations. In that way, the primary caregiver will know how you
are responding to treatment. We will also provide your physician,
other health care professionals, or a subsequent
health care provider copies of your records to assist them in
treating you once we are no longer treating you.
-
We will use your health
information for payment.
Example: We may
send a bill to you or to a third-party payer, such as a health
insurer. The information on or accompanying the bill may include
information that identifies you, your diagnosis, treatment received,
and supplies used.
-
We will use your health
information for health operations.
Example: Members
of the medical staff, the risk or quality improvement manager, or
members of the quality assurance team may use information in your
health record to assess the care and outcomes in your cases and the
competence of the caregivers. We will use this information in an
effort to continually improve the quality and effectiveness of the
health care and services that we provide.
-
Business associates: We provide
some services through contracts with business associates.
Examples include
certain diagnostic tests, a copy service to make copies of medical
records, and the like. When we use these services, we may disclose
your health information to the business associates so that they can
perform the function(s) that we have contracted with them to do and
bill you or your third-party payer for services provided. To protect
your health information, however, we require the business associates
to appropriately safeguard your information.
-
Notification: We may use or
disclose information to notify or assist in notifying a family
member, a personal representative, or another person responsible
for your care, your location, and general condition.
-
Communication with family:
Unless you object, health professionals, using their best
judgment, may disclose to a family member, another relative, a
close personal friend, or any other person that you identify
health information relevant to that person’s involvement in your
care or payment related to your care.
-
Research: We may disclose
information to researchers when their research has been approved
by an institutional review board that has reviewed the research
proposal and established protocols to ensure the privacy of your
health information.
-
Funeral directors: We may disclose
health information to funeral directors consistent with
applicable law to enable them to carry out their duties.
-
Marketing/continuity of care:
We may contact you to provide appointment reminders or
information about treatment alternatives or other health-related
benefits and services that may be of interest to you.
-
Food and Drug Administration
(“FDA”): We may disclose to the FDA health information relative
to adverse effects/events with respect to food, drugs,
supplements, product or product defects, or post marketing
surveillance information to enable product recalls, repairs, or
replacement.
-
Workers compensation: We may
disclose health information to the extent authorized by and to
the extent necessary to comply with laws relating to workers
compensation or other similar programs established by law.
-
Public health: As required by
law, we may disclose your health information to public health or
legal authorities charged with preventing or controlling
disease, injury, or disability.
-
Correctional institution: If
you are an inmate of a correctional institution, we may disclose
to the institution or agents thereof health information
necessary for your health and the health and safety of other
individuals.
-
Law enforcement: We may
disclose health information for law enforcement purposes as
required by law or in response to a valid subpoena.
-
Health oversight agencies and
public health authorities: If a member of our work force or a
business associate believes in good faith that we have engaged
in unlawful conduct or otherwise violated professional or
clinical standards and are potentially endangering one or more
patients, workers, or the public, they may disclose your health
information to health oversight agencies and/or public health
authorities, such as the department of health.
-
The federal Department of
Health and Human Services (“DHHS”): Under the privacy standards,
we must disclose your health information to DHHS as necessary to
determine our compliance with those standards.
Effective date: 04/14/2003
WE
RESERVE THE RIGHT TO CHANGE OUR PRACTICES AND TO MAKE
THE NEW PROVISIONS EFFECTIVE FOR ALL INDIVIDUALLY
IDENTIFIABLE HEALTH INFORMATION THAT WE MAINTAIN.
|
|