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.
The
Sheffield Village Fire Department (SVFD) is required by law to maintain
the privacy of certain confidential health care information, known as
Protected Health Information or PHI, and to provide you with a notice of
our legal duties and privacy practices with respect to your PHI. The
SVFD is also required to abide by the terms of the version of this
Notice currently in effect.
Uses and Disclosures of PHI:
The SVFD may use PHI for the purposes of treatment, payment, and health
care operations, in most cases without your written permission. Examples
of our use of your PHI:
For Treatment.
This includes such things as obtaining verbal and written information
about your medical condition and treatment from you as well as from
others, such as doctors and nurses who give orders to allow us to
provide treatment to you. We may give your PHI to other health care
providers involved in your treatment, and may transfer your PHI via
radio or telephone to the hospital or dispatch center.
For Payment.
This includes any activities we must undertake in order to get
reimbursed for the services we provide to you, including such things as
submitting bills to insurance companies, making medical necessity
determinations, and collecting outstanding accounts.
For Health Care Operations.
This
includes quality assurance activities, licensing, and training programs
to ensure that our personnel meet our standards of care and follow
established policies and procedures, as well as certain other management
functions.
Reminders for Scheduled Transports and Information on Other
Services.
We may also contact you to provide you with a reminder of any scheduled
appointments for non-emergency ambulance and medical transportation, or
to provide information about other services we render.
Use and Disclosure of PHI
Without Your Authorization.
The SVFD is permitted to use PHI without your written authorization, or
opportunity to object, in certain situations, and unless prohibited by a
more stringent state law, including:
-
For the treatment, payment, or health care operations activities of
another health care provider who treats you.
-
As
required by law, including reporting for public health purposes.
-
To
a family member, other relative, or close personal friend or other
individual involved in your care if we obtain your verbal agreement
to do so or if we give you an opportunity to object to such a
disclosure and you do not raise an objection, and in certain other
circumstances where we are unable to obtain your agreement and
believe the disclosure is in your best interests;
-
To
report abuse, neglect or domestic violence.
-
For health oversight activities including audits or government
investigations, inspections, disciplinary proceedings, and other
administrative or judicial actions undertaken by the government (or
their contractors) by law to oversee the health care system;
-
For judicial and administrative proceedings as required by a court
or administrative order, or in some cases in response to a subpoena,
discovery request, or other legal process.
-
For law enforcement activities in limited situations, such as when
responding to a warrant.
-
For military, national defense and security and other special
government functions.
-
To
avert a serious threat to the health and safety of a person or the
public at large.
-
For workers’ compensation purposes, and in compliance with workers’
compensation laws.
-
To
coroners, medical examiners, and funeral directors for identifying a
deceased person, determining cause of death, or carrying on their
duties as authorized by law.
-
If
you are an organ donor, we may release health information to
organizations that handle organ procurement or organ, eye or tissue
transplantation or to an organ donation bank, as necessary to
facilitate organ donation and transplantation.
-
For research projects, but this will be subject to strict oversight
and approvals.
-
We
may also use or disclose health information about you in a way that
does not personally identify you or reveal who you are.
-
Any other use or disclosure of PHI, other than those listed above
will only be made with your written authorization. You may revoke
your authorization at any time, in writing, except to the extent
that we have already used or disclosed medical information in
reliance on that authorization.
Patient Rights:
As a patient, you have a number of rights with respect to your PHI,
including:
The right to access, copy, or inspect your PHI.
This means you may inspect and copy most of the medical information
about you that we maintain. We will normally provide you with access to
this information within 30 days of your request. We may also charge you
a reasonable fee for you to copy any medical information that you have
the right to access. In limited circumstances, we may deny you access to
your medical information, and if you disagree with our decision, you may
obtain a review of certain types of denials. We have available forms to
request access to your PHI. We will provide a written response if we
deny you access and let you know your review rights. You also have the
right to receive confidential communications of your PHI. To assure your
records are discussed and disclosed only to the proper person (you or
your legally authorized representative), we normally require you to
appear in person at our office to access or discuss your medical
information. However, we will honor reasonable requests by you to
receive communications about your medical information by alternative
means or at alternative locations. If you wish to inspect and copy your
medical information.
The right to amend your PHI.
You have the right to ask us to amend written medical information that
we may have about you if you think it is inaccurate or incomplete. We
will generally amend your information within 60 days of your request and
will notify you when we have amended the information. We are permitted
by law to deny your request to amend your medical information only in
certain circumstances, like when we believe the information you have
asked us to amend is correct and complete.
The right to request an accounting.
We are required to keep a record of certain disclosures of your medical
information, and you may request an accounting of what that record
contains. Disclosures that we are NOT required to keep a record of
include:
·
Information we have used or disclosed for purposes of treatment, payment
or health care operations,
·
When
we share your health information with our business associates, like our
billing company or a medical facility from or to which we have
transported you, or
·
Information for which you have already given us written authorization to
disclose.
We are
required to keep this record of disclosures for the past six years, or
back to the compliance date of April 14, 2003 for federal privacy
regulations, whichever is later.
The right to request that we restrict the uses and disclosures
of your PHI.
You have the right to request that we restrict how we use and disclose
the medical information that we have about you. The SVFD is not required
to agree to any restrictions you request, but any restrictions agreed to
by the SVFD in writing are binding on the SVFD.
Internet,
Electronic Mail, and the Right to Obtain Copy of Paper Notice on
Request.
If we
maintain a web site, we will prominently post a copy of this Notice on
our web site. If you allow us, we will forward you this Notice by
electronic mail instead of on paper and you may always request a paper
copy of the Notice.
Revisions to the Notice: The
SVFD
reserves the right to change the terms of this Notice at any time, and
the changes will be effective immediately and will apply to all
protected health information that we maintain. Any material changes to
the Notice will be promptly posted in our facilities and posted to our
web site, if we maintain one. You can get a copy of the latest version
of this Notice by contacting the Fire Chief.
Your Legal Rights and Complaints:
You
also have the right to complain to us, or to the Secretary of the United
States Department of Health and Human Services if you believe your
privacy rights have been violated. You will not be retaliated against in
any way for filing a complaint with us or to the government. Should you
have any questions, comments, or complaints you may direct all inquiries
to the Fire Chief.