This notice describes how medical
information about you may be used and disclosed and how
you can get access to this information. Please review it
carefully. If you have any questions about this Notice
please contact our Privacy Officer @ 721-0090.
This Notice of Privacy Practices describes how we may use and
disclose your protected health information to carry out treatment,
payment or health care operations and for other purposes that
are permitted or required by law. It also describes your rights
to access and control your protected health information. “Protected
health information” is information about you, including
demographic information, that may identify you and that relates
to your past, present or future physical or mental health or
condition and related health care services.
We are required to abide by the terms of this Notice of Privacy
Practices. We may change the terms of our notice, at any time.
The new notice will be effective for all protected health information
that we maintain at that time. Upon your request, we will provide
you with any revised Notice of Privacy Practices by accessing
our website @ Heartlandortho.com, calling the office and requesting
that a revised copy be sent to you in the mail, or asking for
one at the time of your next appointment.
1. Uses and Disclosures of Protected Health Information
Uses and Disclosures of Protected Health Information Based
Upon Your Written Consent
You will be asked by your physician to sign a consent form.
Once you have consented to use and disclosure of your protected
health information for treatment, payment and health care operations
by signing the consent form, your physician will use or disclose
your protected health information as described in this Section
1. Your protected health information may be used and disclosed
by your physician, our office staff and others outside of our
office that are involved in your care and treatment for the
purpose of providing health care services to you. Your protected
health information may also be used and disclosed to pay your
health care bills and to support the operation of the physician’s
practice.
Following are examples of the types of uses and disclosures
of your protected health care information that the physician’s
office is permitted to make once you have signed our consent
form. These examples are not meant to be exhaustive, but to
describe the types of uses and disclosures that may be made
by our office once you have provided consent.
Treatment: We will use and disclose your protected
health information to provide, coordinate, or manage your health
care and any related services. This includes the coordination
or management of your health care with a third party that has
already obtained your permission to have access to your protected
health information. For example, we would disclose your protected
health information, as necessary, to a home health agency that
provides care to you. We will also disclose protected health
information to other physicians who may be treating you when
we have the necessary permission from you to disclose your
protected health information. For example, your protected health
information may be provided to a physician to whom you have
been referred to ensure that the physician has the necessary
information to diagnose or treat you.
In addition, we may disclose your protected health information
from time-to-time to another physician or health care provider
(e.g., a specialist or laboratory) who, at the request of your
physician, becomes involved in your care by providing assistance
with your health care diagnosis or treatment to your physician.
Payment: Your protected health information
will be used, as needed, to obtain payment for your health
care services. This 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,
obtaining approval for a hospital stay may require that your
relevant protected health information be disclosed to the health
plan to obtain approval for the hospital admission.
Healthcare Operations: We may use or disclose,
as-needed, your protected health information in order to support
the business activities of your physician’s practice.
These activities include, but are not limited to, quality assessment
activities, employee review activities, training of medical
students, licensing, marketing and fundraising activities,
and conducting or arranging for other business activities.
For example, we may disclose your protected health information
to medical school students that see patients at our office.
In addition, we may use a sign-in sheet at the registration
desk where you will be asked to sign your name and indicate
your physician. We may also call you by name in the waiting
room when your physician is ready to see you. We may use or
disclose your protected health information, as necessary, to
contact you to remind you of your appointment.
We will share your protected health information with third
party “business associates” that perform various
activities (e.g., billing, transcription services) for the
practice. Whenever an arrangement between our office and a
business associate involves the use or disclosure of your protected
health information, we will have a written contract that contains
terms that will protect the privacy of your protected health
information.
We may use or disclose your protected health information, as
necessary, to provide you with information about treatment
alternatives or other health-related benefits and services
that may be of interest to you. We may also use and disclose
your protected health information for other marketing activities.
For example, your name and address may be used to send you
a newsletter about our practice and the services we offer.
We may also send you information about products or services
that we believe may be beneficial to you. You may contact our
Privacy Officer to request that these materials not be sent
to you.
Uses and Disclosures of Protected Health Information
Based upon Your Written Authorization
Other uses and disclosures of your protected health information
will be made only with your written authorization, unless otherwise
permitted or required by law as described below. You may revoke
this authorization, at any time, in writing, except to the
extent that your physician or the physician’s practice
has taken an action in reliance on the use or disclosure indicated
in the authorization.
Other Permitted and Required Uses and Disclosures
That May Be Made With Your Consent, Authorization or Opportunity
to Object
We may use and disclose your protected health information in
the following instances. You have the opportunity to agree
or object to the use or disclosure of all or part of your protected
health information. If you are not present or able to agree
or object to the use or disclosure of the protected health
information, then your physician may, using professional judgment,
determine whether the disclosure is in your best interest.
In this case, only the protected health information that is
relevant to your health care will be disclosed.
Others Involved in Your Healthcare: 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. We may use or disclose
protected health information to notify or assist in notifying
a family member, personal representative or any other person
that is responsible for your care of your location, general
condition or death. Finally, we may use or disclose your protected
health information to an authorized public or private entity
to assist in disaster relief efforts and to coordinate uses
and disclosures to family or other individuals involved in
your health care.
Emergencies: We may use or disclose your protected
health information in an emergency treatment situation. If
this happens, your physician shall try to obtain your consent
as soon as reasonably practicable after the delivery of treatment.
If your physician or another physician in the practice is required
by law to treat you and the physician has attempted to obtain
your consent but is unable to obtain your consent, he or she
may still use or disclose your protected health information
to treat you.
Communication Barriers: We may use and disclose
your protected health information if your physician or another
physician in the practice attempts to obtain consent from you
but is unable to do so due to substantial communication barriers
and the physician determines, using professional judgment,
that you intend to consent to use or disclosure under the circumstances.
Other Permitted and Required Uses and Disclosures
That May Be Made Without Your Consent, Authorization or Opportunity
to Object
We may use or disclose your protected health information in
the following situations without your consent or authorization.
These situations include:
Required By Law: We may use or disclose your
protected health information to the extent that law requires
the use or disclosure. The use or disclosure will be made in
compliance with the law and will be limited to the relevant
requirements of the law. You will be notified, as required
by law, of any such uses or disclosures.
Public Health: We may disclose your protected
health information for public health activities and purposes
to a public health authority that is permitted by law to collect
or receive the information. The disclosure will be made for
the purpose of controlling disease, injury or disability. We
may also disclose your protected health information, if directed
by the public health authority, to a foreign government agency
that is collaborating with the public health authority.
Communicable Diseases: We may disclose your
protected health information, if authorized by law, to a person
who may have been exposed to a communicable disease or may
otherwise be at risk of contracting or spreading the disease
or condition.
Health Oversight: We may disclose protected
health information to a health oversight agency for activities
authorized by law, such as audits, investigations, and inspections.
Oversight agencies seeking this information include government
agencies that oversee the health care system, government benefit
programs, other government regulatory programs and civil rights
laws.
Abuse or Neglect: We may disclose your protected
health information to a public health authority that is authorized
by law to receive reports of child abuse or neglect. In addition,
we may disclose your protected health information if we believe
that you have been a victim of abuse, neglect or domestic
violence to the governmental entity or agency authorized
to receive such information. In this case, the disclosure
will be made consistent with the requirements of applicable
federal and state laws.
Food and Drug Administration: We may disclose your
protected health information to a person or company required
by the Food and Drug Administration to report adverse events,
product defects or problems, biologic product deviations,
track products; to enable product recalls; to make repairs
or replacements, or to conduct post marketing surveillance,
as required.
Legal Proceedings: We may disclose protected
health information in the course of any judicial or administrative
proceeding, in response to an order of a court or administrative
tribunal (to the extent such disclosure is expressly authorized),
in certain conditions in response to a subpoena, discovery
request or other lawful process.
Law Enforcement: We may also disclose protected
health information, so long as applicable legal requirements
are met, for law enforcement purposes. These law enforcement
purposes include (1) legal processes and otherwise required
by law, (2) limited information requests for identification
and location purposes, (3) pertaining to victims of a crime,
(4) suspicion that death has occurred as a result of criminal
conduct, (5) in the event that a crime occurs on the premises
of the practice, and (6) medical emergency (not on the Practice’s
premises) and it is likely that a crime has occurred.
Coroners, Funeral Directors, and Organ Donation: We
may disclose protected health information to a coroner or medical
examiner for identification purposes, determining cause of
death or for the coroner or medical examiner to perform other
duties authorized by law. We may also disclose protected health
information to a funeral director, as authorized by law, in
order to permit the funeral director to carry out their duties.
We may disclose such information in reasonable anticipation
of death. Protected health information may be used and disclosed
for cadaver organ, eye or tissue donation purposes.
Research: We may disclose your protected health
information to researchers when an institutional review board
that has reviewed the research proposal and established protocols
to ensure the privacy of your protected health information
has approved their research.
Criminal Activity: Consistent with applicable
federal and state laws, we may disclose your protected health
information, if we believe that the use or disclosure is necessary
to prevent or lessen a serious and imminent threat to the health
or safety of a person or the public. We may also disclose protected
health information if it is necessary for law enforcement authorities
to identify or apprehend an individual.
Military Activity and National Security: When
the appropriate conditions apply, we may use or disclose protected
health information of individuals who are Armed Forces personnel
(1) for activities deemed necessary by appropriate military
command authorities; (2) for the purpose of a determination
by the Department of Veterans Affairs of your eligibility for
benefits, or (3) to foreign military authority if you are a
member of that foreign military services. We may also disclose
your protected health information to authorized federal officials
for conducting national security and intelligence activities,
including for the provision of protective services to the President
or others legally authorized.
Workers’ Compensation: we may disclose
your protected health information as authorized to comply with
workers’ compensation laws and other similar legally
established programs.
Inmates: We may use or disclose your protected
health information if you are an inmate of a correctional facility
and your physician created or received your protected health
information in the course of providing care to you.
Required Uses and Disclosures: Under the law,
we must make disclosures to you and when required by the Secretary
of the Department of Health and Human Services to investigate
or determine our compliance with the requirements of Section
164.500 et. seq.
2. Your Rights
Following is a statement of your rights with respect to your
protected health information and a brief description of how
you may exercise these rights.
You have the right to inspect and copy your protected
health information. This means you may inspect and
obtain a copy of protected health information about you that
is contained in a designated record set for as long as we maintain
the protected health information. A “designated record
set” contains medical and billing records and any other
records that your physician and the practice uses for making
decisions about you. The copy of a records set will be done
along with a processing fee as part of the federal guidelines
allowing offices to charge for the record set.
Under federal law, however, you may not inspect or copy the
following records; psychotherapy notes; information compiled
in reasonable anticipation of, or use in, a civil, criminal,
or administrative action or proceeding, and protected health
information that is subject to law that prohibits access to
protected health information. Depending on the circumstances,
a decision to deny access may be reviewable. In some circumstances,
you may have a right to have this decision reviewed. Please
contact our Privacy Officer if you have questions about access
to your medical record.
You have the right to request a restriction of your protected
health information.This means you may ask us not
to use or disclose any part of your protected health information
for the purposes of treatment, payment or healthcare operations.
You may also request that any part of your protected health
information not be disclosed to family members or friends
who may be involved in your care or for notification purposes
as described in this Notice of Privacy Practices. Your request
must state the specific restriction requested and to whom
you want the restriction to apply.
Your physician is not required to agree to a restriction that
you may request. If physician believes it is in your best interest
to permit use and disclosure of your protected health information,
your protected health information will not be restricted. If
your physician does 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. With this in mind, please discuss any
restriction you wish to request with your physician. You may
request a restriction by submitting a written request to the
Privacy Officer.
You have the right to request to receive
confidential communications from us by alternative means
or at an alternative location. We will accommodate
reasonable requests. We may also condition this accommodation
by asking you for information as to how payment will be
handled or specification of an alternative address or other
method of contact. We will not request an explanation from
you as to the basis for the request. Please make this request
in writing to our Privacy Officer.
You may have the right to have your physician amend
your protected health information. This means you
may request an amendment of protected health information
about you in a designated record set for as long as we maintain
this information. In certain cases, we may deny your request
for an amendment. If we deny your request for 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. Please contact
our Privacy Officer to determine if you have questions about
amending your medical record.
You have the right to receive an accounting of certain
disclosures we have made, if any, of your protected health
information. This right applies to disclosures
for purposes other than treatment, payment or healthcare
operations as described in this Notice of Privacy Practices.
It excludes disclosures we may have made to you, for a
facility directory, to family members or friends involved
in your care, or for notification purposes. You have the
right to receive specific information regarding these disclosures
that occurred after April 14, 2003. You may request a shorter
timeframe. The right to receive this information is subject
to certain exceptions, restrictions and limitations.
You have the right to obtain a paper copy of this
notice from us, upon request, even if you have agreed
to accept this notice electronically.
3. Complaints
You may complain to us or to the Secretary of Health and
Human Services if you believe your privacy rights have been
violated by us. You may file a complaint with us by notifying
our Privacy Officer of your complaint. We will not retaliate
against you for filing a complaint.
Our Privacy Officer is: Chris Dimartino He can be reached
at (402) 721-0090 if you have any further questions or request
for information about the complaint process, or this privacy
statement.
This notice was published and became effective on April
14, 2003 |