HIPAA
NOTICE OF PRIVACY PRACTICES FOR
PROTECTED HEALTH INFORMATION
[45 CFR 164.520]
Background
The HIPPA Privacy Rule gives individuals a fundamental new right to be informed of the privacy
practices of their health plans and of most of their health care providers, as well as to be informed of their
privacy rights with respect to the personal health information. Health plans and covered health care providers
are required to develop and distribute a notice that provides a clear explanation of these rights and practices.
The notice is intended to focus individuals on privacy issues and concerns, and to prompt them to have
discussions with their health plans and health care providers and exercise their rights.
How the Rule Works
General Rule. The Privacy Rule provides that an individual has a right to adequate notice of how a
covered entity may use and disclose protected health information about the individual, as well as his or her
rights and the covered entity’s obligations with respect to that information. Most covered entities must develop
and provide individuals with this notice of their privacy practices.
The Privacy Rule does not require the following entities to develop a notice:
Health care clearinghouses, if the only protected health information they create or receive is
as a business associate of another covered entity. See 45 CFR 164.500(b)(1).
A correctional institution that is a covered entity (e.g. that has a covered health care
provider component).
A group health plan that provides benefits only through one or more contracts of insurance with
health insurance issuers or HMOs, and that does not create or receive protected health information other
than summary health information or enrollment or disenrollment information.
See 45 CFR 164.520(a).
Content of the Notice. Covered entities are required to provide a notice in plain language that
describes:
How the covered entity may use and disclose protected health information about an
individual.
The individual’s rights with respect to the information and how the individual may exercise
these rights, including how the individual may complain to the covered entity.
The covered entity’s legal duties with respect to the information, including a statement that
the covered entity is required by law to maintain the privacy of protected health information.
Who individuals can contact for further information about the covered entity’s privacy
policies.
The notice must include an effective date. See 45 CFR 164.520(b) for the specific requirements for
developing the content of the notice.
A covered entity is required to promptly revise and distribute its notice whenever it makes
material changes to any of its privacy practices. See 45 CFR 164.520 (b)(3), 164.520 (c)(1)(i)(C) for health
plans, and 164.520 (c)(2)(iv) for covered health care providers with direct treatment relationships with
individuals.
Providing the Notice
A covered entity must make its notice available to any person who asks for it.
A covered entity must prominently post and make available its notice on any web site it
maintains that provides information about its customer services for benefits.
Health plans must also:
Provide notice to individuals then covered by the plan no later than April 14, 2003 (April
14, 2004, for small health plans) and to new enrollees at the time of enrollment.
Provide a revised notice to individuals then covered by the plan within 60 days of a
material revision.
Notify individuals then covered by the plan of the availability of and how to obtain the
notice at least once every three years.
Covered Direct Treatment Providers must also:
Provide the notice to the individual no later than the date of first service delivery
(after the April 14, 2003 compliance date of the Privacy Rule) and, except in an emergency treatment
situation, make a good faith effort to obtain the individual’s written acknowledgement of receipt of the
notice. If an acknowledgement cannot be obtained, the provider must document his or her efforts to
obtain the acknowledgement and the reason why it was not obtained.
When first service delivery to an individual is provided over the internet, through e-mail,
or otherwise electronically, the provider must send an electronic notice automatically and
contemporaneously in response to the individual’s first request of service. The provider must make a
good faith effort to obtain a return receipt or other transmission from the individual in response to
receiving the notice.
In an emergency treatment situation, provide the notice as soon as it is reasonably
practicable to do so after the emergency situation has ended. In these situations, providers are not
required to make a good faith effort to obtain a written acknowledgement from individuals.
Make the latest notice (i.e. the one that reflects any changes in privacy policies)
available at the provider’s office or facility for individuals to request to take with them, and post it
in a clear and prominent location at the facility.
A covered entity may email the notice to an individual if the individual agrees to receive an
electronic notice.
See 45 CFR 164.520(c) for the specific requirements for providing the notice.
Organizational Options
Any covered entity, including a hybrid entity or an affiliated covered entity, may choose to
develop more than one notice, such as when an entity performs different types of covered functions (i.e. the
functions that make it a health plan, a health care provider, or a health care clearinghouse) and there are
variations in its privacy practices among these covered functions. Covered entities are encouraged to
provide individuals with the most specific notice possible.
Covered entities that participate in an organized health care arrangement may choose to produce
a single, joint notice if certain requirements are met. For example, the joint notice must describe the
covered entities and the service delivery sites to which it applies. If any one of the participating covered
entities provides the joint notice to an individual, the notice distribution requirement with respect to
that individual is met for all of the covered entities. See 45 CFR 164.520(d).
For more information, visit http://answers.hhs.gov.
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