Confidentiality
Privacy
Security
Data Integrity
Availability
100

The primary U.S. federal law that governs the confidentiality and security of patient health information

HIPAA

100

Primary disclosure requirements for a healthcare provider under the HIPAA Privacy Rule

Covered Entity

100

Establish a set of national standards for protecting individuals' Electronic Protected Health Information (ePHI)

HIPAA Security Rule

100

Data is readable and understandable throughout its lifecycle.

Legible

100

Crucial for patient safety, as clinicians must be able to access current medical records, test results, and allergies at the point of care, regardless of system outages, disasters, or hardware failure.

Availability

200

Healthcare provider typically disclose a patient's protected health information (PHI) without the patient's explicit authorization

Treatment, Payment, and Healthcare Operations (TPO)

200

Rights regarding their Protected Health Information (PHI)

Privacy Rule

200

Policies and procedures to manage security measures, such as Security Risk Assessments and employee training.

Administrative Safeguards

200

Inaccurate dosage, a missing allergy entry, or an incomplete list of current medications can lead to adverse drug reactions or a fatal overdose.

Medication and Treatment Errors

200

Set of policies and procedures that enables a Covered Entity to respond to an emergency or other occurrence  that damages systems containing ePHI, ensuring that critical business processes and patient care continue.

Contingency Plan

300

Requires covered entities (like hospitals and clinics) to make reasonable efforts to limit the amount of PHI used, disclosed, and requested to the minimum necessary to accomplish the intended purpose

Minimum Necessary Rule

300

Responsible for enforcing the HIPAA Privacy and Security Rules

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Office for Civil Rights (OCR)

300

Converts ePHI into an unreadable format, making it unusable to unauthorized parties.

Encryption

300

Tracking who accessed, when they accessed it, and what they changed.

Accountability

300

Procedures for creating and maintaining retrievable exact copies of ePHI.

Data Backup Plan

400

The ethical principle in healthcare that requires providers to keep patient information private and not disclose it without consent

Confidentiality

400

This rule should be reviewed for quick discussion between providers in a semi-private area

HIPAA Privacy Rule

400

Methods like unique user IDs, strong passwords, automatic logoffs, and role-based access.

Access Controls

400

Copying an error from a previous note into a new note.

Propagation of Errors

400

Surgeries, diagnostic tests, and critical procedures may be postponed or canceled.

Delayed or Interrupted Treatment

500

A patient expresses a serious, immediate threat of harm to themselves or an identifiable third party (often required by state law)

Danger to Self or Others

500

Detailed notes recorded by a mental health professional during a private counseling session.

Excludes patient's right to access their PHI

500

Healthcare organization do if it discovers a breach of unsecured PHI

Notify affected individuals

500

Allowing administrators to immediately spot unauthorized or suspicious activities investigating breaches or mistakes.

Detection

500

Lack of immediate access to crucial information like patient allergies, chronic conditions, or blood type in an emergency can be life-threatening

Compromised Emergency Care