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Effective
on March 19, 2003
Dermatology
& Cosmetic Surgery Associates, P.A.
NOTICE OF PRIVACY PRACTICES
As Required by the Privacy Regulations Created as a Result
of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act
of 1996 (HIPAA)
THIS NOTICE DESCRIBES HOW HEALTH INFORMATION ABOUT YOU (AS
A PATIENT OF THIS PRACTICE ) MAY BE USED AND DISCLOSED, AND
HOW YOU CAN GET ACCESS TO YOUR INDIVIDUALLY IDENTIFIABLE HEALTH
INFORMATION.
PLEASE
REVIEW THIS NOTICE CAREFULLY.
A. OUR
COMMITMENT TO YOUR PRIVACY
Our practice
is dedicated to maintaining the privacy of your individually
identifiable health information (IIHI). In conducting our
business, we will create records regarding you and the treatment
and services we provide to you. We are required by law to
maintain the confidentiality of health information that identifies
you. We also are required by law to provide you with this
notice of our legal duties and the privacy practices that
we maintain in our practice concerning your IIHI. By federal
and state law, we must follow the terms of the notice of privacy
practices that we have in effect at the time.
We realize
that these laws are complicated, but we must provide you with
the following important information:
·
How we may use and disclose your IIHI
· Your privacy rights in your IIHI
· Our obligations concerning the use and disclosure
of your IIHI
The terms
of this notice apply to all records containing your IIHI that
are created or retained by our practice. We reserve the right
to revise or amend this Notice of Privacy Practices. Any revision
or amendment to this notice will be effective for all of your
records that our practice has created or maintained in the
past, and for any of your records that we may create or maintain
in the future. Our practice will post a copy of our current
Notice in our offices in a visible location at all times,
and you may request a copy of our most current Notice at any
time.
B. IF
YOU HAVE QUESTIONS ABOUT THIS NOTICE, PLEASE CONTACT:
Privacy
Officer, 7701 Greenbelt Road, Suite 504, Greenbelt, MD 20770.
C. WE
MAY USE AND DISCLOSE YOUR INDIVIDUALLY IDENTIFIABLE HEALTH
INFORMATION (IIHI) IN THE FOLLOWING WAYS
The following
categories describe the different ways in which we may use
and disclose your IIHI.
1. Treatment.
Our practice may use your IIHI to treat you. For example,
we may ask you to have laboratory tests (such as blood or
urine tests), and we may use the results to help us reach
a diagnosis. We might use your IIHI in order to write a prescription
for you, or we might disclose your IIHI to a pharmacy when
we order a prescription for you. Many of the people who work
for our practice - including, but not limited to, our doctors
and nurses - may use or disclose your IIHI in order to treat
you or to assist others in your treatment. Additionally, we
may disclose your IIHI to others who may assist in your care,
such as your spouse, children or parents.
2. Payment.
Our practice may use and disclose your IIHI in order to bill
and collect payment for the services and items you may receive
from us. For example, we may contact your health insurer to
certify that you are eligible for benefits (and for what range
of benefits), and we may provide your insurer with details
regarding your treatment to determine if your insurer will
cover, or pay for, your treatment. We also may use and disclose
your IIHI to obtain payment from third parties that may be
responsible for such costs, such as family members. Also,
we may use your IIHI to bill you directly for services and
items.
3. Health
Care Operations. Our practice may use and disclose your IIHI
to operate our business. As examples of the ways in which
we may use and disclose your information for our operations,
our practice may use your IIHI to evaluate the quality of
care you received from us, or to conduct cost-management and
business planning activities for our practice.
4. Appointment
Reminders. Our practice may use and disclose your IIHI to
contact you and remind you of an appointment.
5. Treatment
Options. Our practice may use and disclose your IIHI to inform
you of potential treatment options or alternatives.
6. Health-Related
Benefits and Services. Our practice may use and disclose your
IIHI to inform you of health-related benefits or services
that may be of interest to you.
7. Release
of Information to Family/Friends. Our practice may release
your IIHI to a friend or family member that is involved in
your care, or who assists in taking care of you. For example,
a parent or guardian may ask that a babysitter take their
child to the pediatrician's office for treatment of a cold.
In this example, the babysitter may have access to this child's
medical information.
8. Disclosures
Required By Law. Our practice will use and disclose your IIHI
when we are required to do so by federal, state or local law.
D. USE
AND DISCLOSURE OF YOUR IIHI IN CERTAIN SPECIAL CIRCUMSTANCES
The following
categories describe unique scenarios in which we may use or
disclose your identifiable health information:
1. Public
Health Risks. Our practice may disclose your IIHI to public
health authorities that are authorized by law to collect information
for the purpose of:
·
maintaining vital records, such as births and deaths
· reporting child abuse or neglect
· preventing or controlling disease, injury or disability
· notifying a person regarding potential exposure to
a communicable disease
· notifying a person regarding a potential risk for
spreading or contracting a disease or condition
· reporting reactions to drugs or problems with products
or devices
· notifying individuals if a product or device they
may be using has been recalled
· notifying appropriate government agency(ies) and
authority(ies) regarding the potential abuse or neglect of
an adult patient (including domestic violence); however, we
will only disclose this information if the patient agrees
or we are required or authorized by law to disclose this information
· notifying your employer under limited circumstances
related primarily to workplace injury or illness or medical
surveillance.
2. Health
Oversight Activities. Our practice may disclose your IIHI
to a health oversight agency for activities authorized by
law. Oversight activities can include, for example, investigations,
inspections, audits, surveys, licensure and disciplinary actions;
civil, administrative, and criminal procedures or actions;
or other activities necessary for the government to monitor
government programs, compliance with civil rights laws and
the health care system in general.
3. Lawsuits
and Similar Proceedings. Our practice may use and disclose
your IIHI in response to a court or administrative order,
if you are involved in a lawsuit or similar proceeding. We
also may disclose your IIHI in response to a discovery request,
subpoena, or other lawful process by another party involved
in the dispute, but only if we have made an effort to inform
you of the request or to obtain an order protecting the information
the party has requested.
4. Law
Enforcement. We may release IIHI if asked to do so by a law
enforcement official:
·
Regarding a crime victim in certain situations, if we are
unable to obtain the person's agreement
· Concerning a death we believe has resulted from criminal
conduct
· Regarding criminal conduct at our offices
· In response to a warrant, summons, court order, subpoena
or similar legal process
· To identify/locate a suspect, material witness, fugitive
or missing person
· In an emergency, to report a crime (including the
location or victim(s) of the crime, or the description, identity
or location of the perpetrator)
5. Deceased Patients. Our practice may release IIHI to a medical
examiner or coroner to identify a deceased individual or to
identify the cause of death. If necessary, we also may release
information in order for funeral directors to perform their
jobs.
6. Research.
Our practice may use and disclose your IIHI for research purposes
in certain limited circumstances. We will obtain your written
authorization to use your IIHI for research purposes except
when: (a) our use or disclosure was approved by an Institutional
Review Board or a Privacy Board; (b) we obtain the oral or
written agreement of a researcher that (i) the information
being sought is necessary for the research study; (ii) the
use or disclosure of your IIHI is being used only for the
research and (iii) the researcher will not remove any of your
IIHI from our practice; or (c) the IIHI sought by the researcher
only relates to decedents and the researcher agrees either
orally or in writing that the use or disclosure is necessary
for the research and, if we request it, to provide us with
proof of death prior to access to the IIHI of the decedents.
7. Serious
Threats to Health or Safety. Our practice may use and disclose
your IIHI when necessary to reduce or prevent a serious threat
to your health and safety or the health and safety of another
individual or the public. Under these circumstances, we will
only make disclosures to a person or organization able to
help prevent the threat.
8. Military.
Our practice may disclose your IIHI if you are a member of
U.S. or foreign military forces (including veterans) and if
required by the appropriate authorities.
9. National
Security. Our practice may disclose your IIHI to federal officials
for intelligence and national security activities authorized
by law. We also may disclose your IIHI to federal officials
in order to protect the President, other officials or foreign
heads of state, or to conduct investigations.
10. Inmates.
Our practice may disclose your IIHI to correctional institutions
or law enforcement officials if you are an inmate or under
the custody of a law enforcement official. Disclosure for
these purposes would be necessary: (a) for the institution
to provide health care services to you, (b) for the safety
and security of the institution, and/or (c) to protect your
health and safety or the health and safety of other individuals.
11. Workers'
Compensation. Our practice may release your IIHI for workers'
compensation and similar programs.
E. YOUR RIGHTS REGARDING YOUR IIHI
You have
the following rights regarding the IIHI that we maintain about
you:
1. Confidential
Communications. You have the right to request that our practice
communicate with you about your health and related issues
in a particular manner or at a certain location. For instance,
you may ask that we contact you at home, rather than work.
In order to request a type of confidential communication,
you must make a written request to Privacy Officer at Dermatology
and Cosmetic Surgery Associates, P.A. specifying the requested
method of contact, or the location where you wish to be contacted.
Our practice will accommodate reasonable requests. You do
not need to give a reason for your request.
2. Requesting
Restrictions. You have the right to request a restriction
in our use or disclosure of your IIHI for treatment, payment
or health care operations. Additionally, you have the right
to request that we restrict our disclosure of your IIHI to
only certain individuals involved in your care or the payment
for your care, such as family members and friends. We are
not required to agree to your request; however, if we do agree,
we are bound by our agreement except when otherwise required
by law, in emergencies, or when the information is necessary
to treat you. In order to request a restriction in our use
or disclosure of your IIHI, you must make your request in
writing to Privacy Officer at Dermatology and Cosmetic Surgery
Associates, P.A. Your request must describe in a clear and
concise fashion:
(a) the
information you wish restricted;
(b) whether you are requesting to limit our practice's use,
disclosure or both; and
(c) to whom you want the limits to apply.
3. Inspection
and Copies. You have the right to inspect and obtain a copy
of the IIHI that may be used to make decisions about you,
including patient medical records and billing records, but
not including psychotherapy notes. You must submit your request
in writing to the Privacy Officer at Dermatology and Cosmetic
Surgery Associates, P.A in order to inspect and/or obtain
a copy of your IIHI. Our practice may charge a fee for the
costs of copying, mailing, labor and supplies associated with
your request. Our practice may deny your request to inspect
and/or copy in certain limited circumstances; however, you
may request a review of our denial. Another licensed health
care professional chosen by us will conduct reviews.
4. Amendment.
You may ask us to amend your health information if you believe
it is incorrect or incomplete, and you may request an amendment
for as long as the information is kept by or for our practice.
To request an amendment, your request must be made in writing
and submitted to the Privacy Officer at Dermatology and Cosmetic
Surgery Associates, P.A. You must provide us with a reason
that supports your request for amendment. Our practice will
deny your request if you fail to submit your request (and
the reason supporting your request) in writing. Also, we may
deny your request if you ask us to amend information that
is in our opinion: (a) accurate and complete; (b) not part
of the IIHI kept by or for the practice; (c) not part of the
IIHI which you would be permitted to inspect and copy; or
(d) not created by our practice, unless the individual or
entity that created the information is not available to amend
the information.
5. Accounting
of Disclosures. All of our patients have the right to request
an "accounting of disclosures." An "accounting
of disclosures" is a list of certain non-routine disclosures
our practice has made of your IIHI for non-treatment or operations
purposes. Use of your IIHI as part of the routine patient
care in our practice is not required to be documented. For
example, the doctor sharing information with the nurse; or
the billing department using your information to file your
insurance claim. In order to obtain an accounting of disclosures,
you must submit your request in writing to the Privacy Manager
at Dermatology and Cosmetic Surgery Associates, P.A. All requests
for an "accounting of disclosures" must state a
time period, which may not be longer than six (6) years from
the date of disclosure and may not include dates before April
14, 2003. The first list you request within a 12-month period
is free of charge, but our practice may charge you for additional
lists within the same 12-month period. Our practice will notify
you of the costs involved with additional requests, and you
may withdraw your request before you incur any costs.
6. Right to a Paper Copy of This Notice. You are entitled
to receive a paper copy of our notice of privacy practices.
You may ask us to give you a copy of this notice at any time.
To obtain a paper copy of this notice, contact the Privacy
Officer at Dermatology Cosmetic Surgery Associates, P.A.
7. Right
to File a Complaint. If you believe your privacy rights have
been violated, you may file a complaint with our practice
or with the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human
Services. To file a complaint with our practice, contact Privacy
Officer at Dermatology and Cosmetic Surgery Associates, P.A.
All complaints must be submitted in writing. You will not
be penalized for filing a complaint.
8. Right
to Provide an Authorization for Other Uses and Disclosures.
Our practice will obtain your written authorization for uses
and disclosures that are not identified by this notice or
permitted by applicable law. Any authorization you provide
to us regarding the use and disclosure of your IIHI may be
revoked at any time in writing. After you revoke your authorization,
we will no longer use or disclose your IIHI for the reasons
described in the authorization. Please note, we are required
to retain records of your care.
Again,
if you have any questions regarding this notice or our health
information privacy policies, please contact Privacy Officer
at Dermatology and Cosmetic Surgery Associates, P.A.
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