This innocuous acronym stands for Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act. This is a federal statute that was enacted in 1996 to attempt to protect the medical records of citizens. The Act itself is massive, and covers many aspects of medical care and the handling of records and information. The two that are relevant to our needs are the privacy rule and the security rule. Both of which will be covered in depth later. There are other rules provided under the act and they are the Enforcement Rule, the Transactions and Code Sets Rule and the Unique Identifiers rule.
The idea was to have an all encompassing act that covered as much ground as possible with regards patient privacy and confidentiality. As expected the act is complicated and convoluted even for lawyers to work with, let alone the people it is designed to protect. It serves to protect any medical record that an individual may have and attempts to afford these records as much control and privacy as possible. The people responsible for enforcing the privacy aspect of HIPAA is the Office for Civil Rights (OCR) and took effect in April 2003.
Within the act, patients are called ‘individuals’ and their medical records are called ‘PHI’ or ‘Personal Health Information’. Any organization who handles PHI, or pays or receives electronic payment from an organization that conforms to HIPAA is subject to it. PHI itself is regarded as any “individually identifiable health information” used, stored or transferred by any organization or entity, in any form.
There was a myth that the HIPAA only covered electronic information, but this is false. It covers medical information as above in any form or media. It doesn’t matter if it is electronic, paper or oral, the act applies.
The PHI itself is anything that could even loosely identify an individual and associate them with medical information. It includes any past, present or future medical conditions, any healthcare provision information and any payments related to any healthcare provision.
Basically this all means that an organization covered by HIPAA is not permitted to disclose medical information to anybody unless the individual authorizes it or the privacy rule itself requires it.
