What Should a HIPAA Sanctions Policy Consist Of?
A HIPAA sanctions policy should consist of appropriate sanctions against workforce members who fail to comply with privacy and security policies and procedures, or who fail to comply with the Privacy or Breach Notification Rules. The HIPAA Rules do not require regulated entities to impose any specific types of sanctions or implement any particular sanction methodology. The requirement to implement and utilize a HIPAA sanctions policy appears in both the HIPAA Privacy Rule and the HIPAA Security Rule. The Privacy Rule requirement in §164.530(e) reads: “A covered entity must have and apply appropriate sanctions against members of its workforce who fail to comply with the privacy policies and procedures of the covered entity or the requirements of this subpart [the Privacy Rule] or subpart D of this part [the Breach Notification Rule].” The Security Rule requirement in §164.308(a) is similar inasmuch as it reads: “A covered entity or business associate must, in accordance with §164.306 [the Security Rule General Rules], apply appropriate sanctions against workforce members who fail to...
Understanding the HIPAA Medical Records Destruction Rules
The HIPAA medical records destruction rules relate to the safeguards covered entities and business associates must implement to ensure Protected Health Information and electronic Protected Health Information is disposed of compliantly. The HIPAA medical records destruction rules have no impact on state requirements for retaining medical records – which can be much longer than the HIPAA document retention requirements. Although HIPAA has document retention requirements, there are no minimum retention periods in HIPAA for medical records. However, the HIPAA Privacy Rule does require that covered entities implement appropriate administrative, technical, and physical safeguards to protect the privacy of medical records for whatever period the records are maintained by the covered entity. This requirement also applies to the destruction of any personally identifiable data maintained with medical records in the same data set. The HIPAA Medical Records Destruction Rules Although there are no specific HIPAA rules for the destruction of medical records, the HIPAA Privacy Rule requires...
Why HIPAA Business Associates Should Provide HIPAA Training for their Entire Staff
In any organization that qualifies as a HIPAA Business Associate, every member of the workforce is part of the environment in which protected health information (PHI) is created, received, maintained, or transmitted. Even when an individual does not believe they “handle PHI,” their actions, access, and decisions can directly or indirectly affect the privacy and security of that information. For that reason, providing HIPAA training to only a narrow group of employees is not sufficient to fully manage risk, protect patient privacy, and uphold contractual obligations. Consequently, HIPAA training should extend to all staff in a Business Associate organization. Business Associates Have an Organization-Wide Set of Obligations Under HIPAA, a Business Associate is any organization or individual that performs certain services for or on behalf of a HIPAA-Covered Entity when those services involve the use or disclosure of PHI. Once a company meets that definition, it assumes an organization-wide set of obligations. It is not just specific departments or job titles that become regulated; the...
HIPAA Continuity of Care
HIPAA continuity of care is when ongoing care is provided within a healthcare organization or Organized Health Care Arrangement, or when care is provided by multiple healthcare organizations following HHS guidance on minimum necessary disclosures. Whereas the HIPAA Privacy Rule appears to allow disclosures of PHI for continuity of care and care coordination, HHS’ guidance implies disclosures of PHI between covered entities must be kept to the minimum necessary amount. The term “continuity of care” has various definitions. Some definitions imply care is continuous within the same healthcare organization (or Organized Health Care Arrangement), while others extend the definition to multiple healthcare settings. An example of this is a patient’s journey from a physician’s office to a hospital, then to a care home, then to a home health service. With regards to HIPAA and continuity of care in a single healthcare setting – or within an Organized Health Care Arrangement – the HIPAA Privacy Rule allows disclosures of Protected Health Information (PHI) for healthcare...
Does HIPAA Apply to Schools?
HIPAA applies to schools in certain circumstances, such as when a school is a private school, when it provides medical services to the public, or when an unattached healthcare professional provides vaccination services to students. HIPAA applies to most healthcare providers, health plans, healthcare clearinghouses, and business associates of those entities but how does HIPAA apply to schools? In this post we explore when HIPAA applies to schools and how the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act intersects with the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA). Does HIPAA Apply to Schools? Generally, HIPAA compliance does not apply to schools because they are not HIPAA covered entities, but in some situations a school can be a covered entity if healthcare services are provided to students. In such cases, HIPAA may still not apply because any student health information collected would be included in the students’ education records and education records are exempt from the HIPAA Privacy Rule as they are covered by FERPA. More and more schools are offering healthcare...


