Hospice of Kitsap Notice of Privacy Practice
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.
Our Responsibilities
Hospice of Kitsap County ("Hospice") takes the privacy of your health information seriously. The Hospice is required by law to maintain that privacy and to provide you with this Notice of Privacy Practices. This Notice is provided to tell you about our duties and practices with respect to your information. The Hospice is required to abide by the terms of this Notice as are currently in effect.
How the Hospice May use and Disclose Your Health Information
The following categories describe different ways that the Hospice uses and discloses your health information. For each category, an explanation of the category is provided, in some cases with examples. Not every use or disclosure in a category will be listed. However, all of the ways the Hospice is permitted to use and disclose your health information will fall into one of these categories.
Treatment. The Hospice may use your
health information to coordinate care within the Hospice and with others
involved in your care, such as your attending physician, members of the
Hospice interdisciplinary team and other health care professionals who
have agreed to assist the Hospice in coordinating care. For example, the Hospice may disclose your health information to a physician
involved in your care who needs information about your symptoms to prescribe appropriate medications. The Hospice also may disclose health care information about you to individuals outside of the Hospice involved
in your care including family members, other relatives, close personal friends, pharmacists, suppliers of medical equipment or other health care professionals.
Payment. The Hospice may use and disclose your health information to receive payment for the care you receive from the Hospice. For example, the Hospice may be required by your health insurer to provide information regarding your
health care status, your need for care and the care that the Hospice intends to provide to you so that the insurer will reimburse you or the Hospice.
Health Care Operations. The Hospice
may use and disclose health information for its own operations
to facilitate the functioning of the Hospice and as necessary to provide
quality care to all of the Hospice’s patients. Health care operations
include such activities as:
- Quality assessment and improvement activities.
- Activities designed to improve health or reduce health care costs.
- Protocol development, case management and care coordination.
- Contacting health care providers and patients with information about
treatment alternatives and other related functions that do not include
treatment.
- Professional review and performance evaluation.
- Training programs including those in which students, trainees or practitioners
in health care learn under supervision.
- Training of non-health care professionals.
- Accreditation, certification, licensing or credentialing activities.
- Review and auditing, including compliance reviews, medical reviews, legal
services and compliance programs.
- Business planning and development including cost management and planning
related analyses and formulary development.
- Business management and general administrative activities of the Hospice.
- Fundraising for the benefit of the Hospice.
For example the Hospice may use your health information to evaluate its
staff performance, combine your health information with other Hospice
patients in evaluating how to more effectively serve all Hospice patients,
disclose your health information to members of the Hospice workforce
for training purposes, use your health information to contact you as a
reminder regarding a visit to you, or contact you as part of general fundraising
and community information mailings (unless you tell us you do not want
to be contacted).
Facility Directory. The Hospice may disclose certain information about you, including your name, your general health status, your religious affiliation and where you are in the Hospice's facility, in a Hospice directory while you are in the Hospice inpatient facility. The Hospice may disclose this information to people who ask for you by name. Please inform us if you do not want your information to be included in the directory.
Fundraising Activities. The Hospice may use information about you, including your name, address, telephone number and the dates you received care, in order to contact you to raise money for the Hospice. The Hospice may also release this information to a related Hospice foundation. If you do not want the Hospice to contact you, notify the Hospice of Kitsap County Community Relations Department at 360-698-4611 and indicate that you do not wish to be contacted.
Appointment Reminders. The Hospice may
use and disclose your health information to contact you as a reminder
that you have an appointment for a home visit.
Treatment Alternatives. The Hospice may
use and disclose your health information to tell you about or recommend
possible treatment options or alternatives that may be of interest to
you.
As Required by Law. The Hospice will disclose your health information when it is required to do so by any Federal, State or local law.
Public Health Risks. The
Hospice may disclose your health information for public activities and
purposes in order to:
- Prevent or control disease, injury or disability, report disease, injury,
vital events such as birth or death and the conduct of public health surveillance,
investigations and interventions.
- Report adverse events, product defects, to track products or enable product
recalls, repairs and replacements and to conduct post-marketing surveillance
and compliance with requirements of the Food and Drug Administration.
- Notify a person who has been exposed to a communicable disease or who
may be at risk of contracting or spreading a disease.
- Notify an employer about an individual who is a member of the employer's workforce
in certain limited situations, as authorized by law.
Abuse, Neglect or Domestic Violence. The Hospice is allowed
to notify government authorities if the Hospice believes a patient is
the victim of abuse, neglect or domestic violence. The Hospice will make
this disclosure only when specifically required or authorized by law or
when the patient agrees to the disclosure.
Health Oversight Activities. The Hospice may disclose your
health information to a health oversight hospice for activities including
audits, civil administrative or criminal investigations, inspections,
licensure or disciplinary action. The Hospice, however, may not disclose
your health information if you are the subject of an investigation and
your health information is not directly related to your receipt of health
care or public benefits.
Judicial and Administrative Proceedings. The Hospice
may disclose your health information in the course of any judicial or
administrative proceeding in response to an order of a court or administrative
tribunal as expressly authorized by such order or in response to a subpoena,
discovery request or other lawful process, but only when the Hospice makes
reasonable efforts to either notify you about the request or to obtain
an order protecting your health information.
Law Enforcement. As permitted by or required by State law,
the Hospice may disclose your health information to a law enforcement
official for certain law enforcement purposes as follows:
- As required by law for reporting of certain types of wounds or other physical
injuries pursuant to the court order, warrant, subpoena or summons or
similar process.
- For the purpose of identifying or locating a suspect, fugitive, material
witness or missing person.
- Under certain limited circumstances, when you are the victim of a crime.
- To a law enforcement official if the Hospice has a suspicion that your
death was the result of criminal conduct including criminal conduct at
the Hospice.
- In an emergency in order to report a crime.
Coroners and Medical Examiners. The Hospice may disclose your health
information to coroners and medical examiners for purposes of determining
your cause of death or for other duties, as authorized by law.
Funeral Directors. The Hospice may disclose your health information
to funeral directors consistent with applicable law and, if necessary,
to carry out their duties with respect to your funeral arrangements. If
necessary to carry out their duties, the Hospice may disclose your health
information prior to and in reasonable anticipation of your death.
Organ, Eye or Tissue Donation. The Hospice may use or disclose your
health information to organ procurement organizations or other entities
engaged in the procurement, banking or transplantation of organs, eyes
or tissue for the purpose of facilitating the donation and transplantation.
Research Purposes. The Hospice may, under certain circumstances,
use and disclose your health information for research purposes. Before the Hospice discloses
any of your health information for such research purposes, the project
will be subject to an extensive approval process. This process includes evaluating a proposed research project and its use of health information and trying to balance the research needs with your need for privacy. Before the Hospice uses or discloses health information for research, the project will have been approved through this research approval process. Additionally, when it is necessary for research purposes and so long as the health information does not leave the Hospice, it may disclose your health information to researchers preparing to conduct a research project, for example, to help the researchers look for individuals with specific health needs. Lastly, if certain criteria are met, the Hospice may disclose your health information to researchers after your death when it is necessary for research purposes.
Limited Data Set. The Hospice may use or disclose a limited data set of your health information, that is, a subset of your health information for which all identifying information has been removed, for purposes of research, public health, or health care operations. Prior to our release, any recipient of that limited data set must agree to appropriately safeguard your health information.
Serious Threat to Health or Safety. The Hospice may,
consistent with applicable law and ethical standards of conduct, disclose
your health information if the Hospice, in good faith, believes that such
disclosure is necessary to prevent or lessen a serious and imminent threat
to your health or safety or to the health and safety of the public.
Specified Government Functions. In certain circumstances, the Federal
regulations authorize the Hospice to use or disclose your health information
to facilitate specified government functions relating to military and
veterans, national security and intelligence activities, protective services
for the President and others, medical suitability determinations and inmates
and law enforcement custody.
Worker's Compensation. The Hospice may release your health information
for worker's compensation or similar programs.
Other Uses or Disclosures of Health Information
Except as otherwise permitted or required by this Notice of Privacy Practices, the Hospice will not use or disclose your health
information unless you provide written authorization. If you or your
representative authorize the Hospice to use or disclose your health information,
you may revoke that authorization, in writing, at any time. If you revoke your authorization, the Hospice will no longer use or disclose health information about you for the reasons covered by your written authorization, except to the extent that the Hospice has taken action in reliance thereon. You understand that the Hospice is unable to take back any disclosures it has already made under the authorization, and that the Hospice is required to retain our records of the care that it has provided you.
Your Rights Regarding Your Health Information
You have the following rights regarding your health information that the
Hospice maintains:
Right to request restrictions. You have the right to ay request restrictions on certain
uses and disclosures of your health information. You have the right to request a limit on the Hospice's disclosure of your health information to someone who is involved in your care or the payment of your care. The Hospice is not required to agree to your request, unless your request is for a restriction on a disclosure to a health plan for purposes of payment or health care operations (and is not for purposes of treatment) and the medical information you are requesting to be restricted from disclosure pertains solely to a health care item or service for which you have paid out of pocket in full. If you wish to make a request for restrictions,
please contact the Hospice Privacy Official at (360) 698-4611.
Right to receive confidential communications. You have the right to request
that the Hospice communicate with you in a certain way. For example, you
may ask that the Hospice only conduct communications pertaining to your
health information with you privately with no other family members present.
If you wish to receive confidential communications, please contact the
Hospice Privacy Official at (360) 698-4611. The Hospice
will not request that you provide any reasons for your request and will
attempt to honor your reasonable requests for confidential communications.
Right to inspect and copy your health information. You have the right
to inspect and copy your health information, including billing
records. A request to inspect and copy records containing
your health information may be made to the Hospice Privacy Official, at
(360) 698-4611. If you request a copy of your health information, the
Hospice may charge a reasonable fee for copying and assembling costs associated
with your request.
You have the right to request that the Hospice provide you, an entity or a designated individual with an electronic copy of your electronic health record containing your health information, if the Hospice uses or maintains electronic health records containing patient health information. The Hospice may require you to pay the labor costs incurred by the Hospice in responding to your request.
Right to amend health care information. You (or your representative) have
the right to request that the Hospice amend your records, if you believe
that your health information is incorrect or incomplete. That request
may be made as long as the information is maintained by the Hospice. A
request for an amendment of records must be made in writing to the Hospice
Privacy Official at PO Box 3416, Silverdale, WA 98383.
The Hospice may deny the request if it is not in writing or does not include
a reason for the amendment. The request also may be denied if your health
information records were not created by the Hospice, if the records you
are requesting are not part of the Hospice‘s records, if the health
information you wish to amend is not part of the health information you
or your representative are permitted to inspect and copy or if, in the
opinion of the Hospice, the records containing your health information
are accurate and complete.
Right to an accounting. You (or your representative) have the right to
request an accounting of disclosures of your health information made by
the Hospice for certain reasons, including reasons related to public purposes
authorized by law and certain research. The request for an accounting
must be made in writing to the Hospice Privacy Official at
PO Box 3416, Silverdale, WA 98383. The request should specify the
time period for the accounting starting on or after April 14, 2003. Accounting
requests may not be made for periods of time in excess of six (6) years.
The Hospice would provide the first accounting you request during any
12-month period without charge. Subsequent accounting requests may be
subject to a reasonable cost-based fee.
Right to a paper copy of this notice. You (or your representative) have
a right to a separate paper copy of this Notice at any time even if you
or your representative have received this Notice previously. To obtain
a separate paper copy, please contact the Hospice Privacy
Official at (360) 698-4611. The patient or a patient's representative may also obtain a copy of the current version of the Hospice's Notice of Privacy Practices at its website, www.hospicekc.org.
Changes To This Notice
The Hospice reserves the right to change this Notice. The Hospice reserves the right to make the revised Notice effective for health information we already have about you, as well as any health information we receive in the future. We will post a copy of the current Notice in a clear and prominent location to which you have access. The Notice also is available to you upon request. The Notice will contain, at the end of this document, the effective date. In addition, if the Hospice revises the Notice, the Hospice will offer you a copy of the current Notice in effect.
If You Have Any Questions Regarding This Notice
The Hospice has designated Ramona Johnson, Hospice Privacy Official as its contact person for all issues regarding patient privacy and your rights under the Federal privacy standards. You may contact this person at PO Box 3416, Silverdale, WA 98383, 360-698-4611.
Complaints
You (or your personal representative) have the right to express complaints to the Hospice and to the Secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services if you or your representative believe that your privacy rights have been violated. Any complaints to the Hospice should be made in writing to Ramona Johnson, Hospice Privacy Official, or James E. Pledger, Hospice Executive Director, PO Box 3416, Silverdale, WA 98383. The Hospice encourages you to express any concerns you may have regarding the privacy of your information. You will not be retaliated against in any way for filing a complaint.
Effective Date
This Notice is effective February 17, 2010.
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