HIPAA was created in 1996 in order for Covered Entities (Health plan, health care clearing houses and health care provider) to protect and secure a person’s private health information (PHI). Its main focus is to eradicate worker discrimination due pre-existing conditions. Nonetheless, HIPAA concentrated on the implementation of a distributed electronic system to improve administrative transactions among covered entities. However, early stages of HIPAA provisions left many gaps opened. As an example: HIPPA did not specify how information should be protected; what methods, rules or standard needed to be enforced.…
Why was this law enacted? HIPAA was enacted to establish regulations and criteria on how patient information should be used and how data should be protected and stored. This document also gives patients the right to say how they want their information used, and who the information can be released to. Written consent must be obtained from the patient in order to disseminate any information.…
1. Describe the term HIPAA. Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act which is simply known as HIPPA was put into play in 1996 for health care fields and facilities. This act allows patients personal healthcare information to be protected from being used or shared with anyone unless the patient writes a hand consent saying otherwise. Each patient’s healthcare information is kept in medical records, billing records, and health insurance computer systems.…
HIPAA is short for Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act. Congress passed the HIPAA in 1996 in order to protect the portability of insurance coverage as employees moved from job to job, increase accountability and decrease fraud and abuse in health care; and improve the efficiency of the health care payment process, while at the same time protecting a patient’s…
There are five rules to the HIPAA: The Privacy Rule, The Transactions and Code Sets Rule, The security rule, The Unique Identifier Rule, and The Enforcement Rule. So looking at the law what does it do for the provider? This may seem like a very simple task for one to perform, but there is more to keeping something confidential than just “talking” about a person. Care must be taken that files and computer screens are not kept where anyone coming into the office can see or read any personal information.…
The way to communicate has come a long way in the past decade from pagers to smart phones, we become accustom to knowing information as soon as it become available. We depend on our phones for everyday activities such as making a phone call to searching the web. (Karasz et al., 2015) HIPAA Security Rule is writing with flexibility to account for changing technologies. While new technology become available more people are texting (Karasz et al., 2015) 73% of adults reported cell phone texting that’s an increase from 2009.…
Healthcare is an important organization that is a private sector which is an essential part to preventing one’s personal files from social access of being exposed. In the recent 2000’s, the HIPAA law has been developed and created in order to prevent legally any health organizations from leaking or giving out any information to persons or individuals without a patient’s consent. All healthcare organizations are legally obligated to have all patients to fill out a HIPAA form and store it in their charts. One can prove that their information was violated based on if their spouse or employer was given information regarding their records without consent. A formal consent or document should be filled out stated that their spouse or employer is not…
Primitively known as the Kennedy-Kassebaum Bill, the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act is a set of regulations that became law in 1996: enacted by the United State Congress and signed into law by President Bill Clinton. “HIPAA is a set of health care regulations with a two-pronged purpose: help patients’ health insurance move with them, and streamline the transfer of medical records from one health care institution to another; create standard for managing medical records to protect and enforce patients’ right to have their medical records and personal health information (PHI) kept private” (Lauren Hilinski, 2017). In his article titled “HIPAA’s History and Violations: Why HIPAA Was Created”, Lauren highlights the rationale…
The Affordable Care Act (ACA) extends on requirements in HIPAA that promote organizational simplification. These new specifications introduce new operating precepts for the HIPAA-named criteria, a standard for electronic funds transfer, and a national health plan identifier. The result is an article the goes into more detail about the continuing efforts in ACA to provide administrative simplification. In fact, in the year 2013 he U.S Department of Health & Human Services (HHS) recently adopted new rules that make modifications to existing privacy, safety and breach notification provisions in what is frequently pointed to as the final "HIPAA Omnibus Rule." These new rules originate from modifications made under the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH)…
Protect All Sensitive Information with HIPAA The purpose of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, (HIPAA) is to secure and protect sensitive patient information. HHS Office of the Secretary (2013) stated, The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA), Public Law 104-191, was enacted on August 21, 1996. Sections 261 through 264 of HIPAA require the Secretary of HHS to publicize standards for the electronic exchange, privacy and security of health information. Collectively these are known as the Administrative Simplification provisions.…
The HIPAA Act which stands for Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act and acted in 1996. HIPAA laws created a new national standard in protecting people’s health information. Whenever some body visits nowadays the hospital has a little page that you sign letting them know that you acknowledge that the physician office has notify you about their compliance with the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability laws. The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability laws were put into place in protect people from things like identity thief, being denied health care, and or health insurance coverage.…
HIPAA was originally enacted to protect patient information because of the growing use of information technology in healthcare. Some of HIPAA’s privacy rules went into effect in 2002, while security rules went into effect in 2003. The HITECH…
It does not matter what kind of privacy it is, you will always want to be safe. HIPAA plays a large role in privacy within the healthcare industry. According to Doug Campos-Outcalt, MD of the University of Arizona Department of Family and Community Medicine, the intentions of HIPAA are “to protect the public from unauthorized access to, use of, and disclosure of individually identifiable health information”(Campos-Outcalt, 2004). First and foremost, privacy is a huge concern for everyone.…
HIPAA mandates certain privacy and security protections to encourage the realization of administrative efficiencies through healthcare information technologies (Withrow, 2010). The HIPAA Privacy has been controversial but Health and Human Services (HHS) has continued to clarify the complicated privacy rule through the…
Any health care provider, health organizations, or government health plans that use, store, maintain, or transmit patient information must comply with the federal law. HIPAA also protects employees from having their information released by their employer. Along with protecting the privacy of participants the law was also established to cut down on fraudulent activity and improve data systems. Information obtained from your records can not be…