Authorizations Under HIPAA : C:/my Documents/authorizations
Authorizations Under HIPAA : C:/my Documents/authorizations
c:\my documents\authorizations.doc
❑ A physician practice wants to conduct specific forms of marketing to its
patients.
❑ A physician practice must obtain the individual’s authorization to use or
disclose psychotherapy notes to carry out most treatment activities, payment
activities or health care operations. [See discussion of Psychotherapy Notes]
Authorization Forms
In order for a written authorization to be valid under the HIPAA regulation, it must
contain certain core elements. If these elements are not contained in the authorization
form, the authorization is defective. The core elements for an authorization include the
following:
c:\my documents\authorizations.doc
4. The authorization must include a description of each purpose of the requested
use or disclosure. The statement “at the request of the individual” is a sufficient
description of the purpose when an individual initiates the authorization and does
not, or elects not to, provide a statement of the purpose.
5. The authorization must have a specific expiration date, time period or event. [i.e.
– “June 15, 2003”; “one year from the date this authorization is signed.”] If an
event is listed, the event must be directly relevant to the individual or the purpose
of the use or disclosure.
6. The authorization must contain the signature of the individual patient or a
personal representative of the patient, and the date of the signature. If the
authorization is signed by a personal representative, a description of such
representative’s authority to act for the individual must also be included.
In addition, an authorization form must include statements to place the individual patient
on notice of the following:
1. The authorization must state that the individual has the right to revoke the
authorization in writing, unless action has been taken in reliance upon the
authorization, as well as instructions on how the individual may revoke the
authorization. If such information is contained in a physician practice’s Notice of
Privacy Practices, the authorization may simply reference the Notice.
2. The authorization must contain a statement that the physician practice may not
condition treatment or payment on whether the individual signs the authorization,
unless the health care is solely for the purpose of creating protected health
information for disclosure to a third party on provision of an authorization for the
disclosure of the protected health information to such third party.
c:\my documents\authorizations.doc
3. The authorization must contain a statement that information used or disclosed
pursuant to the authorization may be subject to re-disclosure by the recipient and
no longer protected by federal regulation.
While the requirements of HIPAA will become generally known within the health
care community, others outside of the health care community may not be familiar with
HIPAA. Schools, life insurance companies and attorneys will probably continue to use
releases that they have used for years. If a practice discloses information pursuant to
one of these releases, and the release does not meet HIPAA standards, the practice will
be in violation of HIPAA. Therefore, practices should review any authorization to
release medical records to ensure the authorization complies with HIPAA. To assist in
educating others on the requirements of HIPAA, KMA has prepared a sample letter to
inform the person who sent the authorization that the document does not meet HIPAA
standards. Such a document may also be used as a checklist for the practice. KMA
has also prepared a sample authorization form for physician practices, although a great
deal must be filled in by the practice or patient to adhere to HIPAA standards.
As a general rule, authorizations may not be combined with other documents to
create a compound authorization. A physician practice also may not act on an
authorization that does not meet the guidelines set out above or that contains any of the
following defects:
! The expiration date has passed or the expiration event is known to have
occurred;
! The authorization has not been filled out completely, with respect to an element
described above;
! The authorization is known by the physician practice to have been revoked;
! Any material information in the authorization is known by the physician practice
to be false.
c:\my documents\authorizations.doc
If a physician practice seeks an authorization from an individual for a use or
disclosure of protected health information, the practice must provide the individual with
a copy of the signed authorization. Physician practices must also retain all signed
authorizations. An individual may revoke an authorization at any time, provided that the
revocation is in writing and has not been acted upon by the physician practice.
In addition to HIPAA, Kentucky law recognizes a patient’s right of privacy in the
content of a patient’s record and a patient’s communication with a health care provider
with regard to mental health or chemical dependency. [Records regarding mental health
under Kentucky law differ somewhat from those that constitute “psychotherapy notes”
under HIPAA. See the discussion regarding psychotherapy notes.] A patient’s
authorization should include the specific information to be released, particularly when
dealing with mental health or chemical dependency records. Drug or alcohol treatment
records from federally supported programs are also protected. If these records are to
be released, the authorization must mention these areas specifically rather than
attempting to include them within the scope of an authorization to release “all the
patient’s records,” or some similar general language. Also, records containing
reference to sexually transmitted diseases should not be released without specific
authorization.
c:\my documents\authorizations.doc
c:\my documents\authorizations.doc