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Dr. Barry Asman Monroeville Medical Arts Building, Suite 202 2550 Mosside Boulevard Monroeville, Pennsylvania 15146 Phone 412-372-9234 Fax 412-372-8671 |
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Click here to return to the home page NOTICE
REGARDING PRIVACY OF PERSONAL HEALTH INFORMATION For
Barry J. Asman, M.D./Allergy & 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. Federal regulations developed under the
Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) require that the
practice provide you with this Notice Regarding Privacy of Personal Health
Information. The Notice describes (1) how the practice may use and disclose your
protected health information, (2) your rights to access and control your
protected health information in certain circumstances, and (3) the practices’
duties and contact information. I.
Protected Health Information
"Protected
health information" is health information created or received by your
health care provider that contains information that may be used to identify you,
such as demographic data. It includes written or oral health information that
relates to your past, present or future physical or mental health; the provision
of health care to you; and your past, present, or future payment for health
care. II.
The Use and Disclosure of Protected Health Information in Treatment, Payment,
and Health Care Operations
Your protected health information may
be used and disclosed by the practice in the course of providing treatment,
obtaining payment for treatment, and conducting health care operations. Any
disclosures may be made in writing, electronically, by facsimile, or orally. The
practice may also use or disclose your protected health information in other
circumstances if you authorize the use or disclosure, or if state law or the
HIPAA privacy regulations authorize the use or disclosure. Treatment.
The practice may use and disclose your protected
health information in the course of providing or managing your health care as
well as any related services. For the purpose of treatment, the practice may
coordinate your health care with a third party. For example, the practice may
disclose your protected health information to a pharmacy to fulfill a
prescription for asthma medication, to an X-ray facility to order an X-ray, or
to another physician who is administering your allergy shots which we prepared.
In addition, the practice may disclose protected health information to other
physicians or health care providers for treatment activities of those other
providers. Payment.
When needed, the practice will use or disclose your
protected health information to obtain payment for its services. Such uses or
disclosures may include disclosures to your health insurer to get approval for a
recommended treatment or to determine whether you are eligible for benefits or
whether a particular service is covered under your health plan. When obtaining
payment for your health care, the practice may also disclose your protected
health information to your insurance company to demonstrate the medical
necessity of the care or for utilization review when required to do so by your
insurance company. Finally, the practice may also disclose your protected health
information to another provider where that provider is involved in your care and
requires the information to obtain payment. Operations.
The practice may use or disclose your
protected health information when needed for the practice’s health care
operations for the purposes of management or administration of the practice and
of offering quality health care services. Health care operations may include:
(1) quality evaluations and improvement activities; (2) employee review
activities and training programs; (3) accreditation, certification, licensing,
or credentialing activities; (4) reviews and audits such as compliance reviews,
medical reviews, legal services, and maintaining compliance programs; and (5)
business management and general administrative activities. For instance, the
practice may use, as needed, protected health information of patients to review
their treatment course when making quality assessments regarding allergy care or
treatment. In addition, the practice may disclose your protected health
information to another provider or health plan for their health care operations. Other
Uses and Disclosures. As part of treatment, payment,
and healthcare operations, the practice may also use or disclose your protected
health information to: (1) remind you of an appointment including the leaving of
appointment reminder information on your telephone answering machine; (2) inform
you of potential treatment alternatives or options; or (3) inform you of
health-related benefits or services that may be of interest to you. II.
Additional Uses and Disclosures Permitted Without Authorization or An
Opportunity to Object In
addition to treatment, payment, and health care operations, the practice may use
or disclose your protected health information without your permission or
authorization in certain circumstances, including: When
Legally Required. The
practice will comply with any Federal, state or local law that requires it to
disclose your protected health information. When
There Are Risks to Public Health. The
practice may disclose your protected health information for public health
purposes, including to, as permitted or required by law: (1) Prevent, control,
or report disease, injury, or disability; (2) Report vital events such as birth
or death; (3) Conduct public health surveillance, investigations, and
interventions; (4) Collect or report adverse events and product defects, track
FDA regulated products, enable product recalls, repairs, or replacements, and
conduct post marketing surveillance; (5) Notify a person who has been exposed to
a communicable disease or who may be at risk of contracting or spreading a
disease; and (6) Report to an employer information about an individual who is a
member of the workforce. To
Report Abuse, Neglect Or Domestic Violence.
As required or authorized by law or with the
patient’s agreement, the practice may inform government authorities if it is
believed that a patient is the victim of abuse, neglect or domestic violence. To
Conduct Health Oversight Activities. The
practice may disclose your protected health information to a health oversight
agency for use in (1) audits; (2) civil, administrative, or criminal
investigations, proceedings or actions; (3) inspections; (4) licensure or
disciplinary actions; or (5) other necessary oversight activities as permitted
by law. However, if you are the subject of an investigation, the practice will
not disclose protected health information that is not directly related to your
receipt of health care or public benefits. For
Judicial And Administrative Proceedings. The
practice may disclose your protected health information for any judicial or
administrative proceeding if the disclosure is expressly authorized by an order
of a court or administrative tribunal as expressly authorized by such order or a
signed authorization is provided. For
Law Enforcement Purposes. The
practice may disclose your protected health information to a law enforcement
official for law enforcement purposes when: (1) Required by law to report of
certain types of physical injuries; (2) Required by court order, court-ordered
warrant, subpoena, summons or similar process; (3) Needed to identify or locate
a suspect, fugitive, material witness or missing person; (4) Needed to report a
crime in an emergency situation. (5) You are the victim of a crime in specific
limited instances; and (6) Your death is suspected by the practice to be the
result of criminal conduct. To
Coroners, Funeral Directors, and for Organ Donation.
The practice may disclose protected health
information to a coroner or medical examiner for the purpose of (1)
identification, (2) determination of cause of death, or (3) performance of the
coroner or medical examiner’s other duties as authorized by law. In addition,
as permitted by law, the practice may disclose protected health information,
including when death is reasonably anticipated, to a funeral director to enable
the funeral director to carry out his or her duties. Protected health
information may also be used and disclosed for the purpose of cadaveric organ,
eye or tissue donation. To
Prevent or Diminish A Serious and Imminent Threat To Health Or Safety.
If in good faith the practice believes that use or
disclosure of your protected health information is necessary to prevent or
diminish a serious and imminent threat to your health or safety or to the health
and safety of the public, the practice may use or disclose your protected health
information as permitted under law and consistent with ethical standards of
conduct. For
Specified Government Functions. As
authorized by the HIPAA privacy regulations, the practice may use or disclose
your protected health information to facilitate specified government functions
relating to military and veterans activities, national security and intelligence
activities, protective services for the President and others, medical
suitability determinations, correctional institutions, and law enforcement
custodial situations. For
Worker's Compensation. The practice may disclose your
protected health information to comply with worker's compensation laws or
similar programs. III.
Uses and Disclosures Permitted With An Opportunity to Object
Subject
to your objection, the practice may disclose your protected health information
(1) to a family member or close personal friend if the disclosure is directly
relevant to the person's involvement in your care or payment related to your
care; or (2) when attempting to locate or notify family members or others
involved in your care to inform them of your location, condition or death. The
practice will inform you orally or in writing of such uses and disclosures of
your protected health information as well as provide you with an opportunity to
object in advance. Your agreement or objection to the uses and disclosures can
be oral or in writing. If you do not object to these disclosures, the practice
is able to infer from the circumstances that you do not object, or the practice
determines, in its professional judgment, that it is in your best interests for
the practice to disclose information that is directly relevant to the person's
involvement with your care, then the practice may disclose your protected health
information. If you are incapacitated or in an emergency situation, the practice
may exercise its professional judgment to determine if the disclosure is in your
best interests and, if such a determination is made, may only disclose
information directly relevant to your health care. IV.
Uses and Disclosures Authorized by You
Other
than the circumstances described above, the practice will not disclose your
health information unless you provide written authorization. You may revoke your
authorization in writing at any time except to the extent that the practice has
taken action in reliance upon the authorization. V.
Your Rights
You
have certain rights regarding your protected health information under the HIPAA
privacy regulations. These rights include: The
right to inspect and copy your protected health information. For
as long as the practice holds your protected health information, you may inspect
and obtain a copy of such information included in a designated record set. A
"designated record set" contains medical and billing records as well
as any other records that your physician and the practice uses to make decisions
regarding the services provided to you. The practice may deny your request to
inspect or copy your protected health information if the practice determines in
its professional judgment that the access requested is likely to endanger your
life or safety or that of another person, or that it is likely to cause
substantial harm to another person referred to in the information. You have the
right to request a review of this decision. In addition, you may not inspect or
copy certain records by law, including: (1)information compiled in reasonable
anticipation of, or for use in, a civil, criminal, or administrative action or
proceeding; and (2) protected health information that is subject to a law that
prohibits access to protected health information. You may have the right to have
a decision to deny access reviewed in some situations. You must submit a written
request to the practice’s Privacy Officer to inspect and copy your health
information. The practice may charge you a fee for the costs of copying,
mailing, or other costs incurred by the practice in complying with your request.
Please contact our Privacy Officer if you have questions about access to your
medical record at the number given on the last pages of this Notice. The
right to request a restriction on uses and disclosures of your protected health
information. You may request that the
practice not use or disclose specific sections of your protected health
information for the purposes of treatment, payment, or health care operations.
Additionally, you may request that the practice not disclose your health
information to family members or friends who may be involved in your care or for
notification purposes as described in this Notice. In your request, you must
specify the scope of restriction requested as well as the individuals for which
you want the restriction to apply. Your request should be directed to the
practice’s Privacy Officer. The practice may choose to deny your request for a
restriction, in which case the practice will notify you of its decision. Once
the practice agrees to the requested restriction, the practice may not violate
that restriction unless use or disclosure of the relevant information is needed
to provide emergency treatment. The practice may terminate the agreement to a
restriction in some instances. The
right to request to receive confidential communications from the practice by
alternative means or at an alternative location. You
have the right to request that the practice communicates with you through
alternative means or at an alternative location. The practice will make every
effort to comply with reasonable requests. However, the practice may condition
its compliance by asking you for information regarding the procurement of
payment or specific information regarding an alternative address or other method
of contact. You are not required to provide an explanation for your request.
Requests should be made in writing to the practice’s Privacy Officer. The
right to request an amendment of your protected health information. During
the time that the practice holds your protected health information, you may
request an amendment of your information in a designated record set. The
practice may deny your request in some instances. However, should the practice
deny your request for amendment, you have the right to file a statement of
disagreement with the practice. In turn, the practice may develop a rebuttal to
your statement. If it does so, the practice will provide you with a copy of the
rebuttal. Requests for amendment must be submitted in writing to the
practice’s Privacy Officer. Your written request must supply a reason to
support the requested amendments. The
right to request an accounting of certain disclosures.
You have the right to request an accounting of the
practice’s disclosures of your protected health information made for purposes
other than treatment, payment or health care operations as described in this
Notice. The practice is not required to account for disclosures (1) which you
requested, (2) which you authorized by signing an authorization form, (3) for a
facility directory, (4) to friends or family members involved in your care, and
(5) certain other disclosures the practice is permitted to make without your
authorization. The request for an accounting must be made in writing to our
Privacy Officer and should state the time period for which you wish the
accounting to include up to a six year period. The practice is not required to
provide an accounting for disclosures that take place prior to April 14, 2003.
The practice will not charge you for the first accounting you request of any
12-month period. Subsequent accountings may require a fee based on the
practice’s reasonable costs for compliance of the request. The
right to obtain a paper copy of this Notice.
The practice will provide a separate paper copy of
this Notice upon request even if you have already been given a copy of it or
have agreed to review it electronically. VI.
The Practice’s Duties
The
practice is required to ensure the privacy of your health information and to
provide you with this Notice of your rights and the practice’s duties and
procedures regarding your privacy. The practice must abide by the terms of this
Notice, as may be amended periodically. The practice reserves the right to
change the terms of this Notice and to make the new Notice provisions effective
for all protected health information that the practice collects and maintains.
If the practice alters its Notice, the practice will provide a copy of the
revised Notice through regular mail or in-person contact. VII.
Complaints
If
you believe that your privacy rights have been violated, you have the right to
relate complaints to the practice and to the Secretary of the Department of
Health and Human Services. You may provide complaints to the practice verbally
or in writing. Such complaints should be directed to the practice's Privacy
Officer. The practice encourages you to relate any concerns you may have
regarding the privacy of your information and you will not be retaliated against
in any way for filing a complaint. VIII.
Contact Person
The
practice's contact person regarding the practice’s duties and your rights
under the HIPAA privacy regulations is the Privacy Officer. The Privacy Officer
can provide information regarding issues related to this Notice by request.
Complaints to the practice should be directed to the Privacy Officer at the
following address: ATTN: Privacy Officer The Privacy Officer can be contacted by
telephone at 412-372-9234. IX.
Effective Date
This Notice is effective on April 14,
2003. |