HIPAA Privacy Practices
Notice of Privacy Practices
THIS NOTICE DESCRIBES HOW YOUR MEDICAL INFORMATION MAY BE USED AND DISCLOSED
AND HOW YOU CAN GET ACCESS TO THIS INFORMATION. PLEASE REVIEW IT CAREFULLY.
Center for Pain Management, Center for Special Surgery, Center for Southside
Surgery, Lafayette Surgery Center, Indiana Pain Centers-Evansville
www.AmericanPainConsortium.com
Compliance@APCMpain.com
Effective date: December 15, 2022
Purpose
We respect your privacy. We are also legally required to maintain the privacy
of your protected health information (PHI) under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) and other federal and state laws. We follow state privacy laws when they
are stricter or more protective of your PHI than federal law.
As part of our commitment and legal compliance, we are providing you with
this Notice of Privacy Practices (Notice). This Notice describes:
- Our legal duties and privacy practices regarding your PHI, including our
duty to notify you following a data breach of your unsecured PHI.
- Our permitted uses and disclosures of your PHI.
- Your rights regarding your PHI.
Contact
If you have any questions about this Notice, please contact Compliance@APCMpain.com.
PHI Defined
Your PHI:
-
Is health information about you:
- which someone may use to identify you; and
- which we keep or transmit in electronic, oral, or written form.
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Includes information such as your:
- name;
- contact information;
- past, present, or future physical or mental health or medical conditions;
- payment for health care products or services; or
- prescriptions.
Scope
We create a record of the care and health services you receive, to provide
your care, and to comply with certain legal requirements. This Notice
applies to all the PHI that we generate.
We follow and our employees and other workforce members follow the duties
and privacy practices that this Notice describes and any changes once
they take effect.
Changes to this Notice
We can change the terms of this Notice, and the changes will apply to all
information we have about you. The new notice will be available on request,
in our office, and on our website.
Data Breach Notification
We will promptly notify you if a data breach occurs that may have compromised
the privacy or security of your PHI. Most of the time, we will notify
you in writing, by first-class mail, or we may email you if you have provided
us with your current email address and you have previously agreed to receive
notices electronically. In some circumstances, our business associates
may provide the notification.
Uses and Disclosures of Your PHI
The law permits or requires us to use or disclose your PHI for various
reasons, which we explain in this Notice. We have included some examples,
but we have not listed every permissible use or disclosure. When using
or disclosing PHI or requesting your PHI from another source, we will
make reasonable efforts to limit our use, disclosure, or request about
your PHI to the minimum we need to accomplish our intended purpose.
Uses and Disclosures for Treatment, Payment, or Health Care Operations
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Treatment. We may use or disclose your PHI and share it with other professionals
who are treating you, including doctors, nurses, technicians, medical
students, or hospital personnel involved in your care. For example, we
might disclose information about your overall health condition to physicians
who are treating you for a specific injury or condition.
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Payment. We may use and disclose your PHI to bill and get payment from health plans
or others. For example, we share your PHI with your health insurance plan
so it will pay for the services you receive.
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Health Care Operations. We may use and disclose your PHI to run our practice and improve your
care. For example, we may use your PHI to manage the services you receive
or to monitor the quality of our health care services.
Other Uses and Disclosures
We may share your information in other ways, usually for public health
or research purposes or to contribute to the public good. For more information
on permitted uses and disclosures, see www.hhs.gov/ocr/privacy/hipaa/understanding/consumers/index.html.
For example, these other uses and disclosures may involve:
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Our Business Associates. We may use and disclose your PHI to outside persons or entities that perform
services on our behalf, such as auditing, legal, or transcription (Business Associates). The law requires our business associates and their subcontractors to
protect your PHI in the same way we do. We also contractually require
these parties to use and disclose your PHI only as permitted and to appropriately
safeguard your PHI.
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Legal Compliance. For example, we will share your PHI if the Department of Health and Human
Services requires it when investigating our compliance with privacy laws.
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Public Health and Safety Activities. For example, we may share your PHI to:
- report injuries, births, and deaths;
- prevent disease;
- report adverse reactions to medications or medical device product defects;
- report suspected child neglect or abuse, or domestic violence; or
- avert a serious threat to public health or safety.
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Responding to Legal Actions. For example, we may share your PHI to respond to:
- a court or administrative order or subpoena;
- discovery request; or
- another lawful process.
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Research. For example, we may share your PHI for some types of health research that
do not require your authorization, such as if an institutional review board (IRB) has waived the written authorization requirement.
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Medical Examiners or Funeral Directors. For example, we may share PHI with coroners, medical examiners, or funeral
directors when an individual dies.
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Organ or Tissue Donation. For example, we may share your PHI to arrange an authorized organ or tissue
donation from you or a transplant for you.
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Workers' Compensation, Law Enforcement, or Other Government Requests. For example, we may use and disclose your PHI for:
- workers' compensation claims;
- health oversight activities by federal or state agencies;
- law enforcement purposes or with a law enforcement official; or
- specialized government functions, such as military and veterans' activities,
national security and intelligence, presidential protective services,
or medical suitability.
Your Choices
For certain health information, you can tell us your choices about what
we share. If you have a clear preference for how we share your information
in the situations described below, please contact us and we will make
reasonable efforts to follow your instructions.
You have both the right and choice to tell us whether to:
- Share information with your family, close friends, or others involved in
your care.
- Share information in a disaster relief situation.
We may share your information if we believe it is in your best interest,
according to our best judgment, and:
- If you are unable to tell us your preference, for example, if you are unconscious.
- When needed to lessen a serious and imminent threat to health or safety.
Uses and Disclosures that Require Authorization
In these cases we will only share your information if you give us written
permission:
- Marketing our services.
- Other uses and disclosures not described in this Notice.
You may revoke your authorization at any time, but it will not affect information
that we already used and disclosed.
Your Rights
When it comes to your health information, you have certain rights. This
section explains your rights and some of our responsibilities to help you.
You have the right to:
-
Inspect and Obtain a Copy of Your PHI. You have the right to see or obtain an electronic or paper copy of the
PHI that we maintain about you (right to request access). Some clarifications about your access rights:
- we require you to make access requests in writing;
- we may charge a reasonable, cost-based fee for the costs of copying, mailing,
or other supplies associated with your request;
- you may request that we provide a copy of your PHI to a family member,
another person, or a designated entity. We require that you submit these
requests in writing with your signature;
- you may request that we direct a copy of your PHI to a third party of your
choice on a standing, regular basis. We require that you submit these
requests in writing;
- if you request a copy of your PHI, we will generally decide to provide
or deny access within 30 days; and
- we may deny your request for access in certain limited circumstances, however,
if we deny your access request, we will provide a written denial with
the basis for our decision and explain your rights to appeal or file a
complaint.
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Make Amendments. You may ask us to correct or amend PHI that we maintain about you that
you think is incorrect or inaccurate. For these requests:
- you must submit requests in writing, specify the inaccurate or incorrect
PHI, and provide a reason that supports your request;
- we will generally decide to grant or deny your request within 60 days.
If we cannot act within 60 days, we will give you a reason for the delay
in writing and include when you can expect us to complete our decision,
which will be no longer than an additional 30 days.;
- we may deny your request for an amendment if you ask us to amend PHI that
is not part of our record, that we did not create, that is not part of
a designated record set, or that is accurate and complete;
- if we deny your request, we will tell you why in writing. You will have
the right to submit a written statement disagreeing with the denial and,
if you opt not to submit this statement, you may request that we provide
your original request for amendment and the denial with any future disclosures
of PHI subject to the amendment; and
- we will append the material created or submitted in accordance with this
paragraph to your designated record.
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Request Additional Restrictions. You have the right to ask us to limit what we use or share about your PHI (right to request restrictions). You can contact us and request us not to use or share certain PHI for
treatment, payment, or operations or with certain persons involved in
your care. We require that you submit this request in writing. For these requests:
- we are not required to agree;
- we may say "no" if it would affect your care; but
- we will agree not to disclose information to a health plan for purposes
of payment or health care operations if the requested restriction concerns
a health care item or service for which you or another person, other than
the health plan, paid in full out-of-pocket, unless it is otherwise required by law.
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Request an Accounting of Disclosures. You have the right to request an accounting of certain PHI disclosures
that we have made. For these requests:
- we will respond no later than 60 days after receiving the request;
- we will include all the disclosures except for those about treatment, payment,
and health care operations, and certain other disclosures, such as any
you asked us to make; and
- we will provide one accounting a year for free, but will charge a reasonable,
cost-based fee if you ask for another one within 12 months. We will notify
you about the costs in advance and you may choose to withdraw or modify
your request at that time.
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Choose Someone to Act for You. If you have given someone medical power of attorney or if someone is your
legal guardian, that person can exercise your rights and make choices
about your PHI.
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Request Confidential Communications. You have the right to request that we communicate with you about health
matters in a certain way or at a certain location. For example, you can
ask that we only contact you at work or at a specific address. For these requests:
- you must specify how or where you wish to be contacted; and
- we will accommodate reasonable requests.
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Make Complaints. You have the right to complain if you feel we have violated your rights.
We will not retaliate against you for filing a complaint. You may either
file a complaint:
- directly with us by contacting Compliance@APCMpain.com; or
- with the Office for Civil Rights at the US Department of Health and Human
Services; or visit www.hhs.gov/ocr/privacy/hipaa/complaints/.