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The HIPAA Journal is the leading provider of HIPAA training, news, regulatory updates, and independent compliance advice.

Owen Bates

Owen Bates is an Contributing Editor and HIPAA Subject Matter Expert at The HIPAA Journal, having joined the publication in November 2024. He researches HIPAA compliance topics and writes authoritative reference articles that help readers understand complex regulatory requirements in a clear and practical way. He also reviews and updates existing content to reflect changes to HIPAA regulations, helping ensure the accuracy and relevance of published material. In addition to his editorial work, Owen contributes as a reviewer and tester of The HIPAA Journal Training courses, supporting the development of high-quality educational content. He also advises The HIPAA Journal’s clients on best practices for HIPAA implementation and enforcement. Owen is a psychology graduate of Westmont College, California.

Who Enforces HIPAA?

HIPAA is enforced by multiple federal agencies including the Department of Health and Human Services, the Department of Labor, the Department of the Treasury, and the Federal Trade Commission. State Attorney Generals can also enforce HIPAA; while, within each organization subject to the Administrative Simplification provisions, HIPAA compliance should be enforced by a Privacy Officer and a Security Officer. If your organization qualifies as a HIPAA-covered entity or as a business associate to a HIPAA-covered entity, or it creates, receives, maintains, or transmits individually identifiable health information outside the scope of the HIPAA Administrative Simplification provisions, it is important to know who enforces HIPAA because your organization may have to engage with the appropriate agency or agencies. It is also important for organizations´ workforces to know who enforces HIPAA within the organization because, in the event of a HIPAA violation or breach of unsecured Protected Health Information (PHI), the compliance officer needs to be notified as soon as possible in order to...

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What is ePHI?
Mar06

What is ePHI?

In HIPAA, ePHI stands for electronic Protected Health Information – data related to an individual’s health condition, treatment for the condition, or payment for the treatment which is created, received, stored, or transmitted electronically. To fully understand this definition of electronic Protected Health Information (ePHI), it is also necessary to understand what HIPAA is, who it applies to, and what is considered Protected Health Information. The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) was passed in 1996 to reform the health insurance industry. Concerned that the cost of the reforms would be passed onto employers and plan members – and that this would affect tax revenues – Congress added a second title to HIPAA with the objective of neutralizing the costs by combatting fraud and abuse in the healthcare industry, and by simplifying the administration of healthcare transactions. In the context of answering the question what is ePHI, the relevant section of HIPAA Title II is Subpart F. This Subtitle instructs the Secretary for Health and Human Services (HHS)...

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What Does HIPAA Cover?

HIPAA – via the Administrative Simplification Regulations – covers the privacy of individually identifiable health information when it is created, received, maintained, or transmitted by an entity covered by HIPAA or a third party service provider working for or on behalf of a covered entity. It has been more than 25 years since the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) was introduced, but there is still some confusion about HIPAA compliance, what the legislation does for patients, who is required to comply with HIPAA Rules, and what does HIPAA cover. Who Does HIPAA Cover? HIPAA is a federal law that led to the introduction of standards in healthcare relating to patient privacy and the protection of medical data. HIPAA covers most healthcare providers, health plans, healthcare clearinghouses, and business associates of HIPAA-covered entities. Some  HIPAA standards also apply to vendors of personal health records (PHRs), PHR-related entities, and service providers to PHR vendors and PHR-related entities. Healthcare providers include hospitals,...

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What is a HIPAA Power of Attorney?
Feb27

What is a HIPAA Power of Attorney?

A HIPAA Power of Attorney is most often an authorization granting a member of an individual’s family access to the individual’s Protected Health Information in order to make healthcare and payment decisions on behalf of the individual. Different procedures may apply depending on the terminology used in the authorization, the individual’s wishes, state laws, and the circumstances in which the HIPAA Power of Attorney is triggered. Understanding what is a HIPAA Power of Attorney can be a particularly complicated area of HIPAA compliance. This is because the terminology used in a Healthcare Power of Attorney may allow an individual’s “agent” to make healthcare and payment decisions on behalf of the individual, but the terminology might not permit healthcare providers to treat the agent as a personal representative of the individual for HIPAA purposes. In this case, it will not be possible to disclose more than the minimum necessary Protected Health Information (PHI) to the agent (in order to make healthcare and payment decisions), nor provide the agent with full access to the...

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Psychotherapy Notes and HIPAA

The relationship between psychotherapy notes and HIPAA is more complex than with most other types of health information because, under HIPAA, psychotherapy notes are PHI not usually required for treatment, payment, or health care operations other than by the healthcare professional who created them. Explaining what psychotherapy notes are under HIPAA is not straightforward because you have to combine multiple definitions in different areas of the Administrative Simplification Regulations to reach a conclusion. Certainly, psychotherapy notes qualify as individually identifiable health information under HIPAA as individually identifiable health information is (loosely) defined as: “Health information […] collected from an individual […] by a healthcare provider […] that relates to the past, present, or future physical or mental health or condition of an individual, the provision of health care to an individual, or the past, present, or future payment for the provision of health care […] that identifies the individual or […] can be used to identify the individual.” This definition...

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