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Effective
date: April 14, 2003
THIS NOTICE DESCRIBES HOW MEDICAL INFORMATION ABOUT YOU MAY BE USED AND
DISCLOSED AND HOW TO GET ACCESS TO THIS INFORMATION. PLEASE READ IT CAREFULLY.
If you have any questions regarding this notice, you may contact our
privacy officer at:
| Address: |
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Bayfront Digestive Disease Associates, P.C.
Attn: Privacy
Officer
300 State Street, Suite 103a
Erie, PA 16507 |
| Telephone: |
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(814) 456-7733 |
| Facsimile: |
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(814) 456-7213 |
I. YOUR PROTECTED HEALTH INFORMATION
Bayfront Digestive Disease
Associates, P.C. is required by the federal privacy rule
to maintain the privacy of your health information that is protected by the
rule, and to provide you with notice of our legal duties and privacy practices
with respect to your protected health care information.
We are required to abide by the terms of the notice currently in
effect.
Generally speaking, your protected health information is any
information that relates to your past, present or future physical or mental
health or condition, the provision of health care to you, or payment for
health care provided to you, and individually identifies you or reasonably can
be used to identify you.
Your medical and billing records at our practice are examples of
information that usually will be regarded as your protected health
information.
II. USES AND DISCLOSURES OF YOUR PROTECTED HEALTH INFORMATION
A. Treatment, payment, and health care operations
This section describes how
we may use and disclose your protected health information
for treatment, payment, and health care operations purposes. The
descriptions include examples. Not
every possible use or disclosure for treatment, payment and health care
operations purposes will be listed.
1.
Treatment
We
may use and disclose your protected health information for our treatment
purposes as well as the treatment purposes of other health care providers.
Treatment includes the provision, coordination, or management of
health care services to your by one or more health care providers.
Some examples of treatment uses and disclosures include:
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During
an office visit, practice physicians and other staff involved in
your care may review your medical record and share and discuss
your medical information with each other
2. Payment
We
may use and disclose your protected health information for our payment
purposes as well as the payment purposes of other health care
providers and health plans.
Payment uses and disclosures include activities conducted to
obtain payment for the care provided to you or so that you can obtain
reimbursement for that care, for example, from your health insurer. Some examples of payment uses and disclosures include:
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Sharing
information with your health insurer to determine whether you are
eligible for coverage or whether proposed treatment is a covered
service
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Submission
of a claim form to your health insurer
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Providing
supplemental information to your health insurer so that your
health insurer can obtain reimbursement from another health plan
under a coordination of benefits clause in your subscriber
agreement
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Sharing
your demographic information (for example, your address) with
other health care providers who seek this information to obtain
payment for health care services provided to you
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Mailing
you bills in envelopes with our practice name and return address
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Provision of a bill to a family member or other
person designated as responsible for payment for services
rendered to yo
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Providing
medical records and other documentation to your health insurer to
support the medical necessity of a health service
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Allowing
your health insurer access to your medical record for a medical
necessity or quality review audit
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Providing
consumer-reporting agencies with credit information (your name and
address, date of birth, social security number, payment history,
account number, and our name and address)
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Providing
information to a collection agency or our attorney for purposes of
securing payment of a delinquent account
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Disclosing
information in a legal action for purposes of securing payment of
a delinquent account
3. Health Care
Operations
We
may use and disclose your protected health information for our health
care operation purposes as well as certain health care operation
purposes of other health care providers and health plans. Some examples of health care operation purposes include:
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Population based activities relating to improving
health or reducing health care costs
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Reviewing the competence, qualifications, or
performance of health care professionals
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Conducting training programs for medical and other
students
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Accreditation, certification, licensing, and
credentialing activities
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Health care fraud and abuse detection and compliance
programs
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Conducting other medical review, legal services, and
auditing functions
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Business planning and development activities, such as
conducting cost management and planning related analyses
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Sharing information regarding patients with entities
that are interested in purchasing our practice and turning over
patient records to entities that have purchased our practice
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Other business management and general administrative
activities, such as compliance with the federal privacy rule and
resolution of patient grievances
B. USES
AND DISCLOSURES FOR OTHER PURPOSES
We may use and
disclose your protected health information for other purposes.
This section generally
describes those purposes by category. Each category includes one or more
examples. Not every use or disclosure in a category will be listed.
Some examples fall into more than one category – not just the
category under which they are listed.
1. Individuals
involved in care or payment for care
We may
disclose your protected health information to someone involved in your care
or payment for your care, such as a spouse, a family member, or a
close friend. For
example, if you have surgery, we may discuss your physical limitations
with a family member assisting in your post-operative care.
2.
Notification purposes
We may use
and disclose your protected health information to notify, or to assist in
the notification of, a family member, a personal representative, or
another person responsible for your care, regarding your location,
general condition, or death. For
example, if you are hospitalized, we may notify a family member of the
hospital and your general condition. In addition, we may disclose your protected health information
to a disaster relief entity, such as the Red Cross, so that it can
notify a family member, a personal representative, or another person
involved in your care regarding your location, general condition, or
death.
3. Required by law
We may use
and disclose protected health information when required by federal, state,
or local law. For
example, we may disclose protected health information to comply with
mandatory reporting requirements involving births and deaths, child
abuse, disease prevention and control, vaccine-related injuries,
medical device-related deaths and serious injuries, gunshot and other
injuries by a deadly weapon or criminal act, driving impairments, and
blood alcohol testing.
4. Other public health
activities
We may use
and disclose protected health information for public health
activities, including:
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Public
health reporting, for example, communicable disease reports
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Child
abuse and neglect reports
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FDA-related
reports and disclosures, for example, adverse event reports
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Public
health warnings to third parties at risk of a communicable disease
or condition
5. Victims of abuse,
neglect or domestic violence
We may use and disclose protected health
information for purposes of reporting of
abuse, neglect or domestic violence in addition to child abuse, for
example, reports of elder abuse to the Department of Aging or abuse of
a nursing home patient to the Department of Public Welfare.
6. Health oversight
activities
We may use and disclose protected health
information for purposes of health oversight
activities authorized by law. These
activities could include audits, inspections, investigations,
licensure actions, and legal proceedings. For example, we may comply with a Drug Enforcement Agency
inspection of patient records.
7. Judicial and
administrative proceedings
We may use and disclose protected health
information disclosures in judicial and administrative
proceedings in response to a court order or subpoena, discovery
request or other lawful process. For example, we may comply with a court order to testify in a
case at which your medical condition is at issue.
8. Law enforcement
purposes
We may use and disclose protected health
information for certain law enforcement
purposes including to:
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Comply
with legal process, for example, a search warrant
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Comply
with a legal requirement, for example, mandatory reporting of gun
shot wounds>
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Respond
to a request for information for identification/location purposes
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Respond
to a request for information about a crime victim
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Report
a death suspected to have resulted from criminal activity
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Provide
information regarding a crime on the premises>
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Report
a crime in an emergency
9. Coroners and medical
examiners
We may use and disclose protected health
information for purposes of providing information to a
coroner or medical examiner for the purpose of identifying a deceased
patient, determining a cause of death, or facilitating their
performance of other duties required by law.
10. Funeral directors
We may use and disclose protected health
information for purposes of providing information
to funeral directors as necessary to carry out their duties.
11. Organ and tissue
donation
For purposes of facilitating organ, eye
and tissue donation and transplantation, we may use protected health information and disclose protected health
information to entities engaged in the procurement, banking, or
transplantation of cadaveric organs, eyes, or tissue.
12. Threat to public
safety
We may use and disclose protected health
information for purposes involving a threat to public safety, including protection of a third party from harm and
identification and apprehension of a criminal. For example, in certain circumstances, we are required by law
to disclose information to protect someone from imminent serious harm.
13. Specialized government
functions
We may use and disclose protected health
information for purposes involving specialized
government functions including:
14. Workers’
compensation and similar programs
We may use and disclose protected health
information as authorized by and to the
extent necessary to comply with laws relating to workers’
compensation or similar programs, established by law, that provide
benefits for work-related injuries or illness without regard to fault. For example, this would include submitting a claim for payment
to your employer’s workers’ compensation carrier if we treat you
for a work injury.
14. Business associates
Certain functions of the practice are
performed by a business associate such as a
billing company, an accountant firm, or a law firm. We may disclose protected health information to our business
associates and allow them to create and receive protected health
information on our behalf. For
example, we may share with our billing company information regarding
your care and payment for your care so that the company can file
health insurance claims and bill you or another responsible party.
16. Creation of
de-identified information
We may use protected health information
about you in the process of de-identifying
the information. For
example, we may use your protected health information in the process
of removing those aspects, which could identify you so that the
information can be disclosed to a researcher without your
authorization.
17. Incidental disclosures
We may disclose protected health
information as by-product of an otherwise permitted use or
disclosure. For example,
other patients may overhear your name being paged in the waiting room.
III. PATIENT PRIVACY RIGHTS
A. Further restriction on
use or disclosure
You have a right to request that we
further restrict use and disclosure of your protected health
information to carry out treatment, payment, or health care
operations, to someone who is involved in your care or the payment for
your care, or for notification purposes. We are not required to agree to a request for a further
restriction.
To request a further restriction, you must submit a written
request to our privacy officer. The
request must tell us: (a) what information that you want restricted:
(b) how you want the information restricted: and (c) to whom you want
the restriction to apply.
B. Confidential
communication
You have a right to request that we
communicate your protected health information to
you by a certain means or at a certain location. For example, you might request that we only contact you by mail
or at work. We are not
required to agree to requests for confidential communications that are
unreasonable.
To
make a request for confidential communications, you must submit a
written request to our privacy officer. The request must tell us how or where you want to be contacted. In addition, if another individual or entity is responsible for
payment, the request must explain how payment will be handled.
C. Accounting of
disclosures
You have a right to obtain, upon request,
an “accounting” of certain disclosuresof
your protected health information by use (or a business associate for
us). This right is
limited to disclosures within six years of the request and other
limitations. Also in limited circumstances we may charge you for providing
the accounting. To
request an accounting, you must submit a written request to our
privacy officer. The
request should designate the applicable time period.
D. Inspection and copying
You have a right to inspect and obtain a
copy of your protected health information that
we maintain in a designated records set. This right is subject to limitations and we may impose a charge
for the labor and supplies involved in providing copies.
To exercise your right of access, you must submit a written request
to our privacy officer. The
request must: (a) describe the health information to which access is
requested, (b) state how you want to access the information, such as
inspection, pick-up of copy, mailing of copy, (c) specify any
requested form or format, such as paper copy or an electronic means,
and (d) include the mailing address, if applicable.
E. Right to amendment
You have a right to request that we amend
protected health information that we maintain about
you in a designated records set if the information is incorrect or
incomplete. This right is
subject to limitations. To
request an amendment, you must submit a written request to our privacy
officer. The request must
specify each change that you want and provide a reason to support each
requested change.
F. Paper copy of privacy
notice
You have a right to receive, upon
request, a paper copy of our Notice of Privacy
To obtain a paper copy, contact our privacy officer.
IV. CHANGES TO THIS NOTICE
We reserve the right to change this notice
at any time. We further
reserve the right to make any
change effective for all protected health information that we maintain
at the time of the change – including information that we created or
received prior to the effective date of the change. We will post a copy of our current notice in the waiting room for
the practice. At any time,
patients may review the current notice by contacting our privacy
officer.
V. COMPLAINTS
If you believe that we have violated your
privacy rights, you may submit a complaint
to the practice or the Secretary of Health and Human Services. To file a complaint with the practice, submit the complaint in
writing to our privacy officer. We
will not retaliate against you for filing a complaint.
VI. LEGAL EFFECT OF THIS
NOTICE
This notice is not intended to create
contractual or other rights independent of those
created in the federal privacy rule.
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