THIS NOTICE DESCRIBES HOW MEDICAL INFORMATION ABOUT YOU MAY
BE USED OR DISCLOSED AND HOW YOU CAN GET ACCESS TO THIS INFORMATION. PLEASE
REVIEW IT CAREFULLY.
Effective Date: April 11, 2014
IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS ABOUT THIS NOTICE OR IF YOU NEED
MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT OUR PRIVACY OFFICER:
Privacy Officer
Personal Physician Care
4800 Linton Blvd., Suite F-107
Delray Beach, FL 33445
Phone:
561-498-5660
Fax:
561-498-0753
About This Notice
We are required by law to maintain the privacy of Protected
Health Information and to give you this Notice explaining our privacy practices
with regard to that information. You
have certain rights – and we have certain legal obligations – regarding the
privacy of your Protected Health Information, and this Notice also explains
your rights and our obligations. We are
required to abide by the terms of the current version of this Notice.
What is Protected Health Information?
“Protected Health Information” is information that
individually identifies you and that we create or get from you or from another
health care provider, health plan, your employer, or a health care
clearinghouse and that relates to (1) your past, present, or future physical or
mental health or conditions, (2) the provision of health care to you, or (3)
the past, present, or future payment for your health care.
How We May Use and Disclose Your Protected Health
Information
We may use and disclose your Protected Health Information in
the following circumstances:
- For Treatment. We may use or disclose your Protected Health
Information to give you medical treatment or services and to manage and
coordinate your medical care.
For
example, your Protected Health Information may be provided to a physician or
other health care provider (e.g., a specialist or laboratory) to whom you have
been referred to ensure that the physician or other health care provider has
the necessary information to diagnose or treat you or provide you with a
service.
- For Payment.
We may use and disclose your Protected Health
Information so that we can bill for the treatment and services you receive from
us and can collect payment from you, a health plan, or a third party.
This use and disclosure may include certain
activities that your health insurance plan may undertake before it approves or
pays for the health care services we recommend for you, such as making a
determination of eligibility or coverage for insurance benefits, reviewing
services provided to you for medical necessity, and undertaking utilization
review activities. For example, we may need to give your health plan
information about your treatment in order for your health plan to agree to pay
for that treatment.
- For Health Care Operations.
We may use and disclose Protected Health
Information for our health care operations.
For example, we may use your Protected Health
Information to internally review the quality of the treatment and services you
receive and to evaluate the performance of our team members in caring for you.
We also may disclose information to
physicians, nurses, medical technicians, medical students, and other authorized
personnel for educational and learning purposes.
- Appointment Reminders/Treatment
Alternatives/Health-Related Benefits and Services.
We may use and disclose Protected Health
Information to contact you to remind you that you have an appointment for
medical care, or to contact you to tell you about possible treatment options or
alternatives or health related benefits and services that may be of interest to
you.
- Minors.
We may disclose the Protected Health
Information of minor children to their parents or guardians unless such
disclosure is otherwise prohibited by law.
- As Required by Law.
We will disclose Protected Health Information
about you when required to do so by international, federal, state, or local
law.
- To Avert a Serious Threat to
Health or Safety.
We may use and
disclose Protected Health Information when necessary to prevent a serious
threat to your health or safety or to the health or safety of others.
But we will only disclose the information to
someone who may be able to help prevent the threat or as required by law.
- Business Associates.
We may disclose Protected Health Information
to our business associates who perform functions on our behalf or provide us
with services if the Protected Health Information is necessary for those
functions or services.
For example, we
may use another company to do our billing, or to provide transcription or
consulting services for us. All of our business associates are obligated,
under contract with us, to protect the privacy and ensure the security of your
Protected Health Information.
- Workers’ Compensation.
We may use or disclose Protected Health
Information for workers’ compensation or similar programs that provide benefits
for work-related injuries or illness.
- Public Health Risks.
We may disclose Protected Health Information
for public health activities. This includes disclosures to: (1) a person
subject to the jurisdiction of the Food and Drug Administration (“FDA”) for
purposes related to the quality, safety, or effectiveness of an FDA-regulated
product or activity; (2) prevent or control disease, injury, or disability; (3)
report births and deaths; (4) report child abuse or neglect; (5) report
reactions to medications or problems with products; (6) notify people of
recalls of products they may be using; and (7) a person who may have been
exposed to a disease or may be at risk for contracting or spreading a disease
or condition.
- Abuse, Neglect, or Domestic
Violence. We may disclose Protected Health Information to the appropriate
government authority if we believe a patient has been the victim of abuse, neglect,
or domestic violence, and the patient agrees or we are required or authorized
by law to make that disclosure.
- Health Oversight Activities.
We may disclose Protected Health Information
to a health oversight agency for activities authorized by law.
These oversight activities include, for
example, audits, investigations, inspections, licensure, and similar activities
that are necessary for the government to monitor the health care system,
government programs, and compliance with civil rights laws.
- Data Breach Notification
Purposes.
We may use or disclose your
Protected Health Information to provide legally required notices of
unauthorized access to or disclosure of your health information.
- Lawsuits and Disputes.
If you are involved in a lawsuit or a dispute,
we may disclose Protected Health Information in response to a court or
administrative order.
We may also
disclose Protected Health Information in response to a subpoena, discovery
request, or other legal process from someone else involved in the dispute, but
only if efforts have been made to tell you about the request or to get an order
protecting the information requested.
We
may also use or disclose your Protected Health Information to defend ourselves
in the event of a lawsuit.
- Law Enforcement.
We may disclose Protected Health Information,
so long as applicable legal requirements are met, for law enforcement purposes.
- Military Activity and National
Security.
If you are involved with
military, national security, or intelligence activities or if you are in law
enforcement custody, we may disclose your Protected Health Information to
authorized officials, so they may carry out their legal duties under the law.
- Coroners, Medical Examiners, and
Funeral Directors.
We may disclose
Protected Health Information to a coroner, medical examiner, or funeral
director so that they can carry out their duties.
Uses and Disclosures That Require
Us to Give You an Opportunity to Object and Opt Out
- Individuals Involved in Your Care
or Payment for Your Care.
Unless you
object, we may disclose to a member of your family, a relative, a close friend,
or any other person you identify your Protected Health Information that
directly relates to that person’s involvement in your health care. If you
are unable to agree or object to such a disclosure, we may disclose such
information as necessary if we determine that it is in your best interest based
on our professional judgment.
- Disaster Relief. We may disclose
your Protected Health Information to disaster relief organizations that seek
your Protected Health Information to coordinate your care or notify family and
friends of your location or condition in a disaster.
We will provide you with an opportunity to
agree or object to such a disclosure whenever we practicably can do so.
Your Written Authorization is
Required for Other Uses and Disclosures
The following uses and
disclosures of your Protected Health Information will be made only with your
written authorization:
1.
Most uses and disclosures of psychotherapy notes;
2.
Uses and disclosures of Protected Health Information for marketing purposes;
and
3.
Disclosures that constitute a sale of your Protected Health Information.
Other uses and disclosures of
Protected Health Information not covered by this Notice or the laws that apply
to us will be made only with your written authorization. If you do give us an authorization, you may
revoke it at any time by submitting a written revocation to us, and we will no
longer disclose Protected Health Information under the authorization. But disclosure that we made in reliance on
your authorization before you revoked it will not be affected by the
revocation.
Your Rights Regarding Your Protected Health Information
You have the following rights,
subject to certain limitations, regarding your Protected Health Information:
- Right to Inspect and Copy. You have the right to inspect and copy
Protected Health Information that may be used to make decisions about your care
or payment for your care.
We have up to
30 days to make your Protected Health Information available to you, and we may
charge you a reasonable fee for the costs of copying, mailing, or other
supplies associated with your request. We may not charge you a fee if you need
the information for a claim for benefits under the Social Security Act or any
other state or federal needs-based benefit program.
We may deny your request in certain limited
circumstances.
If we do deny your
request, you have the right to have the denial reviewed by a licensed health care
professional who was not directly involved in the denial of your request, and
we will comply with the outcome of the review.
- Right to a Summary or
Explanation.
We can also provide you
with a summary of your Protected Health Information, rather than the entire
record, or we can provide you with an explanation of the Protected Health
Information which has been provided to you, so long as you agree to this
alternative form and pay the associated fees.
- Right to an Electronic Copy of
Electronic Medical Records.
If your
Protected Health Information is maintained in an electronic format (known as an
electronic medical record or an electronic health record), you have the right
to request that an electronic copy of your record be given to you or
transmitted to another individual or entity.
We will make every effort to provide access to
your Protected Health Information in the form or format you request, if it is
readily producible in such form or format.
If the Protected Health Information is not
readily producible in the form or format you request, your record will be
provided in either our standard electronic format or if you do not want this
form or format, a readable hard copy form.
We may charge you a reasonable, cost-based fee
for the labor associated with transmitting the electronic medical record.
- Right to Get Notice of a Breach.
You have the right to be notified upon a
breach of any of your unsecured Protected Health Information.
- Right to Request Amendments.
If you feel that the Protected Health
Information we have is incorrect or incomplete, you may ask us to amend the
information.
You have the right to
request an amendment for as long as the information is kept by or for us.
A request for amendment must be made in
writing to our Privacy Officer, and it must tell us the reason for your
request.
In certain cases, we may deny
your request for an amendment.
If we
deny your request for an amendment, you have the right to file a statement of
disagreement with us, and we may prepare a rebuttal to your statement and will
provide you with a copy of any such rebuttal.
- Right to an Accounting of
Disclosures.
You have the right to ask
for an “accounting of disclosures,” which is a list of the disclosures we made
of your Protected Health Information.
This
right applies to disclosures for purposes other than treatment, payment, or
healthcare operations as described in this Notice.
It excludes disclosures we may have made to
you, for a resident directory, to family members or friends involved in your
care, or for notification purposes.
The
right to receive this information is subject to certain exceptions,
restrictions, and limitations.
Additionally,
limitations are different for electronic health records.
The first accounting of disclosures you
request within any 12-month period will be free.
For additional requests within the same
period, we may charge you for the reasonable costs of providing the accounting.
We will tell what the costs are, and you
may choose to withdraw or modify your request before the costs are incurred.
- Right to Request Restrictions.
You have the right to request a restriction or
limitation on the Protected Health Information we use or disclose for
treatment, payment, or health care operations. You also have the right to
request a limit on the Protected Health Information we disclose about you to
someone who is involved in your care or the payment for your care, such as a
family member or friend.
To request a
restriction on who may have access to your Protected Health Information, you
must submit a written request to our Privacy Officer.
Your request must state the specific
restriction requested and to whom you want the restriction to apply. We
are not required to agree to your request, unless you are asking us to restrict
the use and disclosure of your Protected Health Information to a health plan
for payment or health care operation purposes, and such information you wish to
restrict pertains solely to a health care item or service for which you have
paid us “out-of-pocket” in full.
If we
do agree to the requested restriction, we may not use or disclose your
Protected Health Information in violation of that restriction unless it is
needed to provide emergency treatment.
- Out-of-Pocket-Payments.
If you paid out-of-pocket (that is, you have
requested that we not bill your health plan) in full for a specific item or
service, you have the right to ask that your Protected Health Information with
respect to that item or service not be disclosed to a health plan for purposes
of payment or health care operations, and we will honor that request.
- Right to Request Confidential
Communications.
You have the right to
request that we communicate with you only in certain ways to preserve your
privacy.
For example, you may request
that we contact you by mail at a specific address or call you only at a
specific telephone number.
You must make
any such request in writing and you must specify how or where we are to contact
you.
We will accommodate all reasonable
requests.
We will not ask you the reason
for your request.
- Right to a Paper Copy of This
Notice.
You have the right to a paper
copy of this Notice, even if you have agreed to receive this Notice
electronically.
You may request a copy
of this Notice at any time.
How to Exercise Your Rights
To exercise your rights described
in this Notice, send your request, in writing, to our Privacy Officer. We may ask you to fill out a form that we will
supply. To exercise your right to
inspect and copy your Protected Health Information, you may also contact your
physician directly. To get a paper copy of this Notice, contact us by phone or
mail.
Changes To This Notice
We reserve
the right to change this Notice. We
reserve the right to make the changed Notice effective for Protected Health
Information we already have as well as for any Protected Health Information we
create or receive in the future. A copy
of our current Notice is posted in our office a
nd on our website.
Complaints
You may file a complaint with us
or with the Secretary of the United States Department of Health and Human
Services if you believe your privacy rights have been violated.
To file a complaint with us,
contact our Privacy Officer.
All
complaints must be made in writing and should be submitted within 180 days of
when you knew or should have known of the suspected violation.
There will be no retaliation against you for
filing a complaint.
To file a complaint with the Secretary,
mail it to: Secretary of the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services, 200 Independence Ave, S.W.,
Washington, D.C. 20201. Call (202)
619-0257 (or toll free 877-696-6775) or go to the website of the Office for
Civil Rights, www.hhs.gov/ocr/hipaa/, for more information. There will be no retaliation against you for
filing a complaint.