This document discusses maintaining patient confidentiality in healthcare. It defines confidentiality as nondisclosure of private patient information except to authorized individuals. As healthcare professionals, it is our responsibility under HIPAA law and ethical standards like the Hippocratic Oath to keep a patient's medical records and information private. The document outlines what types of protected patient information must be kept confidential and exceptions to confidentiality in cases of public health threats or abuse. It recommends annual training, refresher materials, audits, and reminders to help maintain confidentiality standards.
Confidentiality can be defined as the
ethical principle or legal right that a
physician or other health professional will
hold secret all information relating to a
patient, unless the patient gives consent
permitting disclosure.
Confidentiality can be defined as the
ethical principle or legal right that a
physician or other health professional will
hold secret all information relating to a
patient, unless the patient gives consent
permitting disclosure.
Health care professional's have an ethical and legal obligation to safeguard patients personal, healthcare, and individual information. However, if there is a breach in patient confidentiality, both the health care organization, as well as the health care professional could face legal, ethical, and financial ramifications. However, to ensure that all STAFF members with direct access to patient care information e.g. (doctors, nurses, etc.) are knowledgeable about the seriousness of patient confidentiality and the laws governed such as HIPAA, UCLA will implement a web-based HIPAA or Patient Privacy training.
Reading the Report: Over 120 UCLA Hospital Staff Saw Celebrity Health Records article, what training could you as a manager put into place to avoid this situation? Present your training idea using any Web 2.0 tools. How can this training on confidentiality be effective for the employees? Respond to at least two of your classmates’ postings.
Health care professional's have an ethical and legal obligation to safeguard patients personal, healthcare, and individual information. However, if there is a breach in patient confidentiality, both the health care organization, as well as the health care professional could face legal, ethical, and financial ramifications. However, to ensure that all STAFF members with direct access to patient care information e.g. (doctors, nurses, etc.) are knowledgeable about the seriousness of patient confidentiality and the laws governed such as HIPAA, UCLA will implement a web-based HIPAA or Patient Privacy training.
Reading the Report: Over 120 UCLA Hospital Staff Saw Celebrity Health Records article, what training could you as a manager put into place to avoid this situation? Present your training idea using any Web 2.0 tools. How can this training on confidentiality be effective for the employees? Respond to at least two of your classmates’ postings.
1. MAINTAINING
CONFIDENTALITY
Heather W. Poythress
MHA 690: Health Care Capstone
Dr. Sherry Grover
April, 4, 2013
2. CONFIDENTIALTY
BY DEFINITION
The nondisclosure of certain information except to another
authorized person.
It is the principle in medical ethics that the information a
patient reveals to a health care provider is private and has
limits on how and when it can be disclosed to a third party.
The legally protected right afforded to specifically designated
health care professionals not to disclose information discerned
or communicated during consultation with a patient.
3. RESPONSIBILITY
As a healthcare professional it is your job, your responsibility to
keep a patients medical information confidential.
Modernized Version of the Hippocratic Oath:
"That whatsoever you shall see or hear of the lives of
men or women which is not fitting to be spoken, you
will keep inviolably secret."
4. PROTECTED INFORMATION
All identifying information, i.e. name, date of birth, social
security number, sex, race, religion, martial status, etc.
All medical and psychiatric records including paper, photo,
video, diagnostic and therapeutic reports, laboratory and
pathology samples.
All patient insurance and billing records
Visual observation of patients receiving medical care or
accessing services; and
Verbal information provided by or about a patient.
5. HIPPA
Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPPA) is a federal
law designed to provide privacy standards to protect a patients' medical
records as well as other health information provided to health plans,
doctors, hospitals and other health care providers.
HIPPA was developed by The Department of Health and Human Services
(HHS).
The new standards provide patients with access to their medical records
and more control over how their personal health information is used and
disclosed.
6. EXCEPTIONS
PatientWaiver
Reporting of specific diseases, injuries or
treatments.
Threats of self-harm
Abuse of a child or adult
All exceptions have specific policies and procedures related to
such situations and should be referenced immediately.
7. RECOMMENDATIONS FOR
MAINTAINING CONFIDENTALITY
Conduct annual training on HIPPA regulation, hospital
policies & procedures and patient confidentiality. Require all
employees sign an attendance log and make it a requirement of
their employee evaluation standards to attend.
Supply quarterly refresher pamphlets on material covered in
annual training.
Conduct random walk through audits.
Post quick reminder signs in employee areas with main points
concerning confidentiality, i.e. bathroom, chartroom,
medication room, etc.
8. References
Patient confidentiality for health care providers. (2002). Retrieved from
http://www.med-ed.virginia.edu/courses/rad/confidentiality/
Wolper, L.F. (2011). Health care administration: Managing organized delivery
systems (5th ed.). Boston: Jones and Bartlett.
Fox News. (2008). Report: Over 120 UCLA hospital staff saw celebrity health records.
Retrieved from http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,398784,00.html