Using the record for billing and reimbursement purposes is considered this type of use.
What is nonclinical (use)?
This is the right to be left alone or to control personal information.
What is privacy?
This is the "I" in HIPAA.
What is insurance?
Federal legislation provides added privacy for treatment programs that receive federal funding for this type of specialized treatment.
What is substance abuse?
Testimony, writings, or other things used to prove or disprove a fact.
What is evidence?
This type of record is comprised of partly paper and partly electronic.
What is a hybrid record?
The obligation of a healthcare provider to not inappropriately disseminate patient information.
What is confidentiality?
This document lists the covered entity's responsibilities and the patient's rights regarding their PHI.
What is the notice of privacy practices (NPP)?
A statement indicating that re-release of information is prohibited
What is notice prohibiting redisclosure (or redisclosure notice)?
A command issued by a court or other authorized official to appear and/or present certain documents or things.
What is a subpoena?
This identifies the healthcare provider who made the entry.
What is authorship?
This term denotes the release of information to an outside party.
What is disclosure?
The number of days a covered entity initially has to provide a patient access to their health record.
What is 30.
These notes of mental health treatment are kept separate from the medical record and are prohibited from being disclosed under HIPAA.
What are psychotherapy notes?
This type of evidence is not admissible in court.
What is hearsay?
When compliance with CMS is satisfied by compliance with an accrediting body, the accrediting body has this authority.
What is deeming (authority)?
In most states, minor patients control the release of their health information for this type of care.
What is substance abuse, reproductive health, mental health, or STD. (Any one of these is correct)
The instances when a covered entity is not required to receive patient authorization to use or disclose PHI.
What are treatment, payment, or healthcare operations (TPO)?
This act, passed by Congress in 2008, limits an insurer's ability to use genetic information to raise rates.
What is GINA (Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act)?
This plan consists of policies and procedures that address how to respond to legal process requests.
What is a legal response plan?
Permanent evidence of what records were destroyed and when is known as this.
What is a certificate of destruction?
For a husband to access his wife's health information, the wife must be considered to be ___________.
What is incompetent?
This standard seeks to limit the patient-specific information to a limited data set or what is only needed to fulfill the intended purpose of the request.
What is minimum necessary.
Upon entering this type of treatment program, patients are provided with a notice that includes a written summary of federal confidentiality protections.
What is substance abuse (drug and alcohol)?
What is a motion to quash?