Effective: April 14, 2003
This Notice describes
how health information about you may be used and disclosed and how
you can get access to this information. Please review it carefully.
We have a legal
duty to safeguard your protected health information. We will protect
the privacy of the health information that we maintain that identifies
you, whether it deals with the provision of health care to you or
the payment for health care. We must provide you with this Notice
about our privacy practices. It explains how, when and why we may
use and disclose your health information. With some exceptions, we
will avoid using or disclosing any more of your health information
than is necessary to accomplish the purpose of the use or disclosure.
We are legally required to follow the privacy practices that are described
in this Notice, which is currently in effect.
However, we reserve
the right to change the terms of this Notice and our privacy practices
at any time. Any changes will apply to any of your health information
that we already have. Before we make an important change to our policies,
we will promptly change this Notice and post a new Notice in each
of our programs, on the resident bulletin board. You may also request,
at any time, a copy of our Notice of Privacy Practices that is in
effect at any given time, from your Primary RA or SHA [You may view
and obtain an electronic copy of this Notice on our web site at www.residentialcare.org].
We would like
to take this opportunity to answer some common questions concerning
our privacy practices:
Question:
How Will this Organization Use and Disclose My Protected Health
Information?
Answer:
We use and disclose health information for many different reasons.
For some of these uses or disclosures, we need your specific authorization.
Below, we describe the different categories of our uses and disclosures
and give you some examples of each.
A.
Uses and Disclosures Relating to Treatment, Payment or Healthcare
Operations. We may, by federal law, use and disclose your health information
for the following reasons:
For Treatment:
With the possible exception of information concerning drug and alcohol
abuse and/or treatment, and HIV status (for which we may need your
specific authorization), we may disclose your general health information
to other health care providers who are involved in your care. For
example, we may disclose your medical history to a hospital if you
need medical attention while at our facility, or to a residential
care program we are referring you to. Reasons for such a disclosure
may be: to get them the medical history information they need to appropriately
treat your condition, to coordinate your care or to schedule necessary
testing.
To Obtain Payment for Treatment: With the possible exception of information
concerning drug and alcohol abuse and/or treatment, and HIV status
(for which we may need your specific authorization), we may use and
disclose necessary health information in order to bill and collect
payment for the treatment that we have provided to you. For example,
we may provide certain portions of your health information to your
health insurance company, Medicare or Medicaid, managed care entity,
county funded service coordination unit or the County (Mental Health/Mental
Retardation, Behavioral Health or Community services) in order to
get paid for taking care of you.
For Health Care Operations: We may, at times, need to use and disclose
your health information to run our organization. For example, we may
use your health information to evaluate the quality of the treatment
that our staff has provided to you. We may also need to provide some
of your health information to our accountants, attorneys and consultants
in order to make sure that were complying with law; if this
information concerns mental health disorders and/or treatment, drug
and alcohol abuse and/or treatment, and/or HIV status, we may be further
limited in what we provide and may be required to first obtain from
you specific authorization.
B.
Certain Other Uses and Disclosures are Permitted by Federal Law. We
may use and disclose your health information without your authorization
for the following reasons:
1.
When a Disclosure is Required by Federal, State or Local Law, in Legal
Proceedings or by Law Enforcement. For example, we may disclose your
protected health information if we are ordered by a court, or if a
law requires that we report that sort of information to a government
agency or law enforcement authorities, such as in the case of a dog
bite, suspected child abuse or a gunshot wound.
2.
For Public Health Activities. Under the law, we need to report information
about certain diseases, and about any deaths, to government agencies
that collect that information. With the possible exception of information
concerning mental health disorders and/or treatment, drug and alcohol
abuse and/or treatment, and HIV status (for which we may need your
specific authorization), we are also permitted to provide some health
information to the coroner or a funeral director, if necessary, after
a clients death.
3.
For Health Oversight Activities. For example, we will need to provide
your health information if requested to do so by the County and/or
the State when they oversee the program in which you receive care.
We will also need to provide information to government agencies that
have the right to inspect our offices and/or investigate healthcare
practices.
4.
For Organ Donation. If one of our clients wished to make an eye, organ
or tissue donation after their death, we may disclose certain necessary
health information to assist the appropriate organ procurement organization.
5.
For Research Purposes. In certain limited circumstances (for example,
where approved by an appropriate Privacy Board or Institutional Review
Board under federal law), we may be permitted to use or provide protected
health information for a research study.
6.
To Avoid Harm. If one of our counselors, physicians or nurses believes
in good faith that it is necessary to protect you, or to protect another
person or the public as a whole, we may provide protected health information
to the police or others who may be able to prevent or lessen the possible
harm.
7.
For Specific Government Functions. With the possible exception of
information concerning drug and alcohol abuse and/or treatment, and
HIV status (for which we may need your specific authorization), we
may disclose the health information of military personnel or veterans
where required by U.S. military authorities. Similarly, we may also
disclose a clients health information for national security
purposes.
8.
For Workers Compensation. We may provide your health information
as described under the workers compensation law, if your condition
was the result of a workplace injury for which you are seeking workers
compensation.
9.
Appointment Reminders and Health-Related Benefits or Services. Unless
you tell us that you would prefer not to receive them, we may use
or disclose your information to provide you with appointment reminders
or to give you information about alternative programs and treatments
that may help you.
10.
Fundraising Activities. For example, if our Organization chose to
raise funds to support one or more of our programs or facilities,
or some other charitable cause or community health education program,
we may use the information that we have about you to contact you.
If you do not wish to be contacted as part of any fundraising activities,
please contact the administrative office at 412-271-2990.
Certain Uses
and Disclosures Require You to Have the Opportunity to Object.
11.
Disclosures to Family, Friends or Others Involved in Your Care. We
may provide a limited amount of your health information to a family
member, friend or other person known to be involved in your care or
in the payment for your care, unless you tell us not to. For example,
if a family member comes with you to your appointment and you allow
them to come into the treatment room with you, we may disclose otherwise
protected health information to them during the appointment, unless
you tell us not to. (This information may not contain information
about drug and alcohol abuse and/or treatment, and HIV status, without
your specific authorization.)
12.
Disclosures to Notify a Family Member, Friend or Other Selected Person.
When you first started in our program, we asked that you provide us
with an emergency contact person in case something should happen to
you while you are at our facilities. Unless you tell us otherwise,
we will disclose certain limited health information about you (your
general condition, location, etc.) to your emergency contact or another
available family member, should you need to be admitted to the hospital,
for example. (This information may not contain information about drug
and alcohol abuse and/or treatment, and HIV status, without your specific
authorization.)
C.
Other Uses and Disclosures Require Your Prior Written Authorization.
In situations other than those categories of uses and disclosures
mentioned above, or those disclosures permitted under federal law,
we will ask for your written authorization before using or disclosing
any of your protected health information. In addition, we need to
ask for your specific written authorization to disclose information
concerning your drug and alcohol abuse and/or treatment, or to disclose
your HIV status.
If you choose
to sign an authorization to disclose any of your health information,
you can later revoke it to stop further uses and disclosures to the
extent that we havent already taken action relying on the authorization,
so long as it is revoked in writing.
Question:
What Rights Do I Have Concerning My Protected Health Information?
Answer:
You have the following rights with respect to your protected health
information:
A.
The Right to Request Limits on Uses and Disclosures of Your Health
Information. You have the right to ask us to limit how we use and
disclose your health information. We will certainly consider your
request, but you should know that we are not required to agree to
it. If we do agree to your request, we will put the limits in writing
and will abide by them, except in the case of an emergency. Please
note that you are not permitted to limit the uses and disclosures
that we are required or allowed by law to make.
B.
The Right to Choose How We Send Health Information to You or How We
Contact You. You have the right to ask that we contact you at an alternate
address or telephone number (for example, sending information to your
work address instead of your home address) or by alternate means (for
example, by [e-mail/mail] instead of telephone). We must agree to
your request so long as we can easily do so.
C.
The Right to See or to Get a Copy of Your Protected Health Information.
In most cases, you have the right to look at or get a copy of your
health information that we have, but you must make the request in
writing. A request form is available at the program where you receive
our services. We will respond to you within 30 days after receiving
your written request. If we do not have the health information that
you are requesting, but we know who does, we will tell you how to
get it. In certain situations, we may deny your request. If we do,
we will tell you, in writing, our reasons for the denial. In certain
circumstances, you may have a right to appeal the decision.
If you request
a copy of any portion of your protected health information, we will
charge you for the copy on a per page basis, only as allowed under
Pennsylvania state law. We need to require that payment be made in
full before we will provide the copy to you. If you agree in advance,
we may be able to provide you with a summary or an explanation of
your records instead. There will be a charge for the preparation of
the summary or explanation.
D.
The Right to Receive a List of Certain Disclosures of Your Health
Information That We Have Made. You have the right to get a list of
certain types of disclosures that we have made of your health information.
This list would not include uses or disclosures for treatment, payment
or healthcare operations, disclosures to you or with your written
authorization, or disclosures to your family for notification purposes
or due to their involvement in your care. This list also would not
include any disclosures made for national security purposes, disclosures
to corrections or law enforcement authorities if you were in custody
at the time, or disclosures made prior to April 14, 2003. You may
not request an accounting for more than a six (6) year period.
To make such a
request, we require that you do so in writing; a request form is available
upon asking staff working in the program where you receive our services.
We will respond to you within 60 days of receiving your request. The
list that you may receive will include the date of the disclosure,
the person or organization that received the information (with their
address, if available), a brief description of the information disclosed,
and a brief reason for the disclosure. We will provide such a list
to you at no charge; but, if you make more than one request in the
same calendar year, you will be charged $1.00 for each additional
request that year.
E.
The Right to Ask to Correct or Update Your Health Information. If
you believe that there is a mistake in your health information or
that a piece of important information is missing, you have a right
to ask that we make an appropriate change to your information. You
must make the request in writing, with the reason for your request,
on a request form that is available from staff at the RCS, Inc. program
where you receive our services. We will respond within 60 days of
receiving your request. If we approve your request, we will make the
change to your health information, tell you when we have done so,
and will tell others that need to know about the change.
We may deny your
request if the protected health information: (1) is correct and complete;
(2) was not created by us; (3) is not allowed to be disclosed to you;
or (4) is not part of our records. Our written denial will state the
reasons that your request was denied and explain your right to file
a written statement of disagreement with the denial. If you do not
wish to do so, you may ask that we include a copy of your request
form, and our denial form, with all future disclosures of that health
information.
F.
The Right to Get A Paper Copy of This Notice. If you have agreed to
receive this Notice via e-mail, you will always have the right to
request a paper copy of this Notice, also.
Question:
How Do I Complain or Ask Questions About This organizations
Privacy Practices?
Answer:
If you have any questions about anything discussed in this Notice
or about any of our privacy practices, or if you have any concerns
or complaints, please contact the Quality Assurance Coordinator at
412-271-2990. You also have the right to file a written complaint
with the Secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
We may not take any retaliatory action against you if you lodge any
type of complaint.
Question:
When Does This Notice Take Effect?
Answer:
This Notice takes effect on April 14, 2003.