Is Disclosing a Pregnancy a HIPAA Violation?
Whether disclosing a pregnancy is a HIPAA violation depends on who is disclosing the information, the purpose of the disclosure, who the disclosure is made to, and whether any required consent, authorization, or attestation has been obtained. How the disclosure is made can also determine whether it constitutes a HIPAA violation. In order to accurately answer the question is disclosing a pregnancy a HIPAA violation, it is necessary to take a number of factors into account. The first factor is who is making the disclosure. If the disclosure is made by a member of a HIPAA covered entity’s or business associate’s workforce, it could be a HIPAA violation depending on subsequent factors. If the disclosure is made by somebody who does not work for a HIPAA covered entity or business associate, it will not be a HIPAA violation. However, if the discloser of the information had previously attested not to disclose information about the pregnancy under §164.509 of the HIPAA Privacy Rule, they would be in violation of §1177 of the Social Security Act. The Purpose of the Disclosure The second...
Can HIPAA be Waived?
Although HIPAA cannot be waived in its entirety, some provisions of the Privacy Rule can be waived in certain circumstances for a limited time – either locally or nationally, or for certain types of medical facilities during certain types of event. HIPAA is a Act that includes more than just the Administrative Simplification provisions (Privacy Rule, Security Rule, Breach Notification Rule, etc.). For HIPAA to be waived in its entirety, this would mean the health insurance portability provisions would be waived, the tax benefits of medical savings accounts would be waived, and changes to the COBRA continuation provisions would be rolled back. However, under §1135 of the Social Security Act, the Secretary for Health and Human Services has the authority to “temporarily waive or modify the application of” certain provisions of the Social Security Act and the HIPAA Privacy Rule during an emergency or disaster, provided the emergency or disaster has been declared by the President and the Secretary declares a Public Health Emergency. What Provisions of the Privacy Rule Can be...
Who Do You Report HIPAA Violations To?
Who you report HIPAA violations to can vary depending on whether – for example – you are a patient reporting a violation of your privacy rights, a member of the workforce reporting a violation by a colleague, or a covered entity reporting a violation that has resulted in a data breach. In all cases, the quicker HIPAA violations are reported, the quicker they can be resolved and prevented from happening again in the future. Who do You Report HIPAA Violations To? If you suspect that HIPAA Rules have been violated by a HIPAA covered entity, a HIPAA business associate, or a subcontractor with whom PHI has been shared, it is important that the violation is reported to allow an investigation to take place. HIPAA violations frequently occur as a result of human error, a misunderstanding of HIPAA regulations, or in some cases, deliberate or willful violations of HIPAA Rules occur. A covered entity or business associate may not be aware that a HIPAA violation has occurred, and should be given the opportunity to correct errors and prevent similar violations from occurring in the...


