
NOTICE OF PRIVACY PRACTICES
NOTICE OF PRIVACY PRACTICES THIS NOTICE DESCRIBES HOW MEDICAL INFORMATION ABOUT YOU MAY BE USED AND DISCLOSED AND HOW YOU CAN GET ACCESS TO THAT INFORMATION. PLEASE REVIEW THIS NOTICE CAREFULLY.
Beyond Podiatry (the “Practice”), in accordance with the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 and regulations promulgated thereunder, commonly known as HIPAA and federal Privacy Rule, 45 CFR parts 160 and 164 (the “Privacy Rule”) and applicable state law, is committed to maintaining the privacy of your protected health information (“PHI”). PHI includes information about your health condition and the care and treatment you receive from the Practice and is often referred to as your health care or medical record. This Notice explains how your PHI may be used and disclosed to third parties. This Notice also details your rights regarding your PHI.
Your Protected Health Information
We collect protected health information (“PHI”) about you through treatment, payment and related healthcare operations, the application and enrollment process, and/or healthcare providers or health plans, or through other means, as applicable. Your PHI that is protected by law broadly includes any past, present and future healthcare information about you that someone may use to identify you and which we keep or transmit in electronic, oral or written form.
HOW THE PRACTICE MAY USE AND DISCLOSE YOUR PROTECTED HEALTH INFORMATION
Generally, we may not use or disclose your protected health information without your permission. Further, once your permission has been obtained, we must use or disclose your protected health information in accordance with the specific terms of that permission. The following uses and disclosures require an authorization:
- Most uses and disclosures of psychotherapy notes;
- Uses and Disclosures of protected health information for marketing purposes unless
(i) the communication occurs face-to-face;
(ii) consists of marketing gifts of nominal value;
(iii) is regarding a prescription refill reminder that is for a prescription currently prescribed or a generic equivalent;
(iv) is for treatment pertaining to existing condition(s) and the Practice does not receive any financial remuneration in either case or cash equivalent; and/or
(v) communication from a healthcare provider to recommend or direct alternative treatments, therapies, healthcare providers, or settings of care when the Practice does not receive any financial remuneration for making the communication; and - Disclosures that constitute a sale of protected health information In the case of fundraising, if we contact you for fundraising efforts, you can tell us not to contact you again. The following are the circumstances under which the Practice is permitted by law to use or disclose your protected health information. The Practice, in accordance with this Notice and without asking for your express consent or authorization, may use and disclose your PHI for the purposes of:
Examples of treatment activities include: (a) the provision, coordination, or management of health care and related services by health care providers; (b) consultation between health care providers relating to a patient; or (c) the referral of a patient for health care from one health care provider to another.
Payment – To get paid for services provided to you, the Practice may provide your PHI, directly or through a billing service, to a third party who may be responsible for your care, including insurance companies and health plans. If necessary, the Practice may use your PHI in other collection efforts with respect to all persons who may be liable to the Practice for bills related to your care.
Examples of payment activities include: (a) billing and collection activities and related data processing; (b) actions by a health plan or insurer to obtain premiums or to determine or fulfill its responsibilities for coverage and provision of benefits under its health plan or insurance agreement, determinations of eligibility or coverage, adjudication or subrogation of health benefit claims; (c) medical necessity and appropriateness of care reviews, utilization review activities; and (d) disclosure to consumer reporting agencies of information relating to collection of premiums or reimbursement. (e) the Practice may need to provide the Medicare program with information about health care services that you received from the Practice so that the Practice can be reimbursed.
Health Care Operations – To operate in accordance with applicable law and insurance requirements, and to provide quality and efficient care, the Practice may need to compile, use and disclose your PHI.
Examples of health care operations include: (a) development of clinical guidelines; (b) contacting patients with information about treatment alternatives or communications in connection with case management or care coordination; (c) reviewing the qualifications of and training health care professionals; (d) underwriting and premium rating; (e) medical review, legal services, and auditing functions; and (f) general administrative activities such as customer service and data analysis.
OTHER USE & DISCLOSURES WHICH MAY BE PERMITTED OR REQUIRED BY LAW
The Practice may use or disclose your protected health information to the extent that such use or disclosure is required by law (including to the Department of Health and Human Services if it wants to see that we’re complying with federal privacy law) and the use or disclosure complies with and is limited to the relevant requirements of such law. The Practice may also use and disclose your PHI without your consent or authorization in the following instances:
De-identified Information – The Practice may use and disclose de-identified health information. As required by law, the Practice will remove all 18 identifiable characteristics from your PHI prior to its being used. Information is deemed to be de-identified if all of the specified 18 identifiers of you, your relatives, employers, or household members are removed and we do not have actual knowledge that the information could be used alone or in combination with other information to identify you.
Business Associate – The Practice may use and disclose PHI to one or more of its business associates if the Practice obtains satisfactory written assurance, in accordance with applicable law, that the business associate will appropriately safeguard your PHI. A business associate is an entity that assists the Practice in undertaking some essential function that involves access to PHI, such as a billing company that assists the office in submitting claims for payment to insurance companies.
Family/Friends or Personal Representative – The Practice may disclose to a family member, other relative, a close personal friend, or any other person identified by you (Personal Representative), your PHI directly relevant to such person’s involvement with your care or the payment for your care. The Practice may also use or disclose your PHI to notify or assist in the notification (including identifying or locating) a family member, a personal representative, or another person responsible for your care, of your location, general condition or death. However, in both cases, the following conditions will apply:
- If you are present at or prior to the use or disclosure of your PHI, the Practice may use or disclose your PHI if you agree, or if the Practice can reasonably infer from the circumstances, based on the exercise of its professional judgment, that you do not object to the use or disclosure.
- If you are not present, the Practice will, in the exercise of professional judgment, determine whether the use or disclosure is in your best interests and, if so, disclose only the PHI that is directly relevant to the person’s involvement with your care.
- respond to investigation requests, court orders, or subpoenas seeking information about or imposing liability on any person for seeking, obtaining, providing, or facilitating lawfully provided reproductive health care; or
- identify any person that is subject to a criminal, civil, or administrative investigation or legal action, including any in law enforcement investigations, criminal prosecutions, family law proceedings, or state licensure proceedings, for seeking, obtaining, providing, or facilitating lawfully provided reproductive health care.
Some examples of seeking, obtaining, providing, or facilitating reproductive health care include: using reproductive health care; performing, furnishing, or paying for reproductive health care; providing information about reproductive health care; arranging, insuring, administering, providing coverage for, approving, or counseling about reproductive health care; or attempting any of these activities. For more information on these prohibited uses and disclosures and when the prohibition applies, see https://www.hhs.gov/hipaa/for-professionals/special-topics/reproductive-health/final-rule- fact-sheet/index.html.]
Law Enforcement Purposes – The Practice may use and disclose PHI, when authorized, to a law enforcement official. For example, your PHI may be released for the purpose of identifying or locating a suspect, fugitive, material witness, or missing person, or reporting crimes in emergencies, reporting a death or may be the subject of a grand jury subpoena.
Coroner, Medical Examiners and Funeral Directors – The Practice may use and disclose PHI to a coroner or medical examiner for the purpose of identifying you or determining your cause of death. We may also release protected health information to funeral directors as necessary for them to carry out their duties.
Organ, Eye or Tissue Donation – The Practice may use and disclose PHI if you are an organ donor to the entity to whom you have agreed to donate your organs.
Research – The Practice may use and disclose PHI subject to applicable legal requirements if the Practice is involved in research activities.
Avert a Threat to Health or Safety – The Practice may use and disclose PHI if it believes that such disclosure is necessary to prevent or lessen a serious and imminent threat to the health or safety of a person or the public and the disclosure is to an individual who is reasonably able to prevent or lessen the threat.
Specialized Government Functions – The Practice may use and disclose PHI when authorized by law with regard to certain military and veteran activity. Workers’ Compensation – The Practice may use and disclose PHI if you are involved in a
Workers’ Compensation claim to an individual or entity that is part of the Workers’ Compensation system. These programs provide benefits for work-related injuries or illness.
National Security and Intelligence Activities – The Practice may use and disclose PHI to authorized governmental officials with necessary intelligence information for national security activities and intelligence activities, protective services of the President and others and medical suitability determinations by entities that are components of the Department of State.
Military and Veterans – The Practice may use and disclose PHI if you are a member of the armed forces, as required by the military command authorities.
Treatment Alternatives -We may use and disclose your protected health information to manage and coordinate your healthcare and inform you of treatment alternatives that may be of interest of you. This may include telling you about treatments, services, products and/or other healthcare providers.
Advice of Appointment and Services – The Practice may, from time to time, contact you to provide appointment reminders or information about treatment alternatives or other health-related benefits and services that may be of interest to you. The following appointment reminders may be used by the Practice: a) a postcard mailed to you at the address provided by you; and b) telephoning your phone number on file and leaving a message on your answering machine or with the individual answering the phone.
Inmates – If you are an inmate of a correctional institution or under the custody of a law enforcement official, we may release your protected health information to the correctional institution or law enforcement official. The release of protected health information is required: a) for the institution to provide you with health care; b) to protect your health and safety of others; and c) for the safety and security of the correctional institution.
Reproductive Health Care PHI Uses and Disclosures Requiring an Attestation – By law, if we collect, receive, or maintain PHI that is potentially related to your reproductive health care, in some cases we must obtain an attestation from PHI recipients that they will not use or share that PHI for a purpose prohibited by law. For example, these situations may involve:
- Health oversight activities. For example, we may share your reproductive health care- related PHI in some situations for health oversight agency audits or inspections, civil or criminal investigations or proceedings, or licensure actions.
- Judicial and administrative proceedings. For example, we may share your reproductive health care-related PHI in some situations in response to a court or administrative order, subpoena, or discovery request.
- Law enforcement purposes. For example, we may share your reproductive health care- related PHI in some situations for law enforcement purposes, including in response to a court-ordered warrant or a law enforcement official’s request for information about a victim of a crime.
- Coroners or medical examiners. For example, we may share your reproductive health care-related PHI in some situations to a coroner or medical examiner to identify a deceased person, determine cause of death, or other duties as authorized by law.
All Other Situations, With Your Specific Authorization
Except as otherwise permitted or required, as described above, we may not use or disclose your protected health information without your written authorization. Further, we are required to use or disclose your protected health information consistent with the terms of your authorization. You may revoke your authorization, in writing, at any time, except to the extent that we have taken action in reliance on such authorization, or, if you provided the authorization as a condition of obtaining insurance coverage, other law provides the insurer with the right to contest a claim under the policy.
Our Responsibilities
Your Protected Health Information
(a) Revoke any Authorization or consent you have given to the Practice, at any time, except to the extent we have relied upon the authorization or consent. To request a revocation, you must submit a written request to the Practice’s Privacy Officer.
(b) Request special restrictions – on certain uses and disclosures of your PHI as authorized by law. In general, this relates to your right to request special restrictions concerning disclosures of your PHI regarding uses for treatment, payment and operational purposes under Privacy Rule, Section 164.522(a) and restrictions related to disclosures to your family and other individuals involved in your care under Privacy Rule, Section 164.510(b). Except in certain instances, the Practice may not be obligated to agree to any requested restrictions. To request restrictions, you must submit a written request to the Practice’s Privacy Officer. In your written request, you must inform the Practice of what information you want to limit, whether you want to limit the Practice’s use or disclosure, or both, and to whom you want the limits to apply. If the Practice agrees to your request, the Practice will comply with your request unless the information is needed in order to provide you with emergency treatment. We will not accept a request to restrict uses or disclosures that are otherwise required by law.
(c) Right to Request Restriction on Disclosures to Health Plans for Services Paid for In Full at Time of Service – You have the right under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, Section 13405(a) to request the Practice to restrict disclosures of protected health information to a health plan for purposes of carrying out payment or healthcare operations if the protected health information pertains solely to a healthcare item or service for which the Practice has been paid out of pocket in full at time of service.
(d) Receive confidential communications or PHI by alternative means or at alternative locations as provided by Privacy Rule Section 164.522(b). For instance, you may request all written communications to you marked “Confidential Protected Health Information.” You must make your request in writing to the Practice’s Privacy Officer. The Practice will accommodate all reasonable requests. We may condition the provision of confidential communications on you providing us with information as to the specification of an alternative address or other method of contact. We may require that a request contain a statement that disclosure of all or a part of the information to which the request pertains could endanger you. We may not require you to provide an explanation of the basis for your request as a condition of providing communications to you on a confidential basis. We must permit you to request and must accommodate reasonable requests by you to receive communications of protected health information from us by alternative means or at alternative locations.
We may require written requests. We must provide you with access to your protected health information in the form or format requested by you, if it is readily producible in such form or format, or, if not, in a readable hard copy form or such other form or format. We may provide you with a summary of the protected health information requested, in lieu of providing access to the protected health information or may provide an explanation of the protected health information to which access has been provided, if you agree in advance to such a summary or explanation and agree to the fees imposed for such summary or explanation. We will provide you with access as requested in a timely manner as required by State law, including arranging with you a convenient time and place to inspect or obtain copies of your protected health information or mailing a copy to you at your request. We will discuss the scope, format, and other aspects of your request for access as necessary to facilitate timely access. If you request a copy of your protected health information or agree to a summary or explanation of such information, we may charge a reasonable cost-based fee, as provided in State law for copying, postage, if you request a mailing, and the costs of preparing an explanation or summary as agreed upon in advance. We reserve the right to deny you access to and copies of certain protected health information as permitted or required by law. We will reasonably attempt to accommodate any request for protected health information by, to the extent possible, giving you access to other protected health information after excluding the information as to which we have a ground to deny access. Upon denial of a request for access or request for information, we will provide you with a written denial specifying the legal basis for denial, a statement of your rights, and a description of how you may file a complaint with us. If we do not maintain the information that is the subject of your request for access but we know where the requested information is maintained, we will inform you of where to direct your request for access.
(f) Amend your PHI as provided by federal law (including Privacy Rule, Section 164.526) and state law. To request an amendment, you must submit a written request to the Practice’s Privacy Officer. You must provide a reason that supports your request. The Practice may deny your request if: (a) we determine that the information or record that is the subject of the request was not created by us, unless you provide a reasonable basis to believe that the originator of the information is no longer available to act on the requested amendment, (b) the information is not part of your designated record set maintained by us, (c) the information is prohibited from inspection by law, (d) the information is accurate and complete, (e) the request is not in writing or (f) if you do not provide a reason in support of your request. If you disagree with the Practice’s denial, you will have the right to submit a written statement of disagreement. If we deny your request, we will provide you with a written denial stating the basis of the denial, your right to submit a written statement disagreeing with the denial, and a description of how you may file a complaint with us or the Secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (“DHHS”). This denial will also include a notice that if you do not submit a statement of disagreement, you may request that we include your request for amendment and the denial with any future disclosures of your protected health information that is the subject of the requested amendment. Copies of all requests, denials, and statements of disagreement will be included in your designated record set. If we accept your request for amendment, we will make reasonable efforts to inform and provide the amendment within a reasonable time to persons identified by you as having received protected health information of yours prior to amendment and persons that we know have the protected health information that is the subject of the amendment and that may have relied, or could foreseeably rely, on such information to your detriment. All requests for amendment shall be sent to the Practice’s Privacy Officer.
(h) Request special authorization to allow the Practice to use and disclose your protected health information (PHI) for purposes other than those enumerated in this Notice of Privacy Practices (NPP). This request must be made in writing to the Practice’s Privacy Officer.
(i) Choose someone to act for you. If you have given someone medical power of attorney or if someone is your legal guardian, that person can exercise your rights and make choices about your health information. We will make sure the person has this authority and can act for you before we take any action.
(j) Your choices. For certain health information, you can tell us your choices about what we share. If you have a clear preference for how we share your information in the situations described below, talk to us. Tell us what you want us to do, and we will follow your instructions. In these cases, you have both the right and choice to tell us to: share information with your family, close friends, or others involved in your care; share information in a disaster relief situation; or include your information in a hospital directory. If you are not able to tell us your preference, for example if you are unconscious, we may go ahead and share your information if we believe it is in your best interest. We may also share your information when needed to lessen a serious and imminent threat to health or safety.
PHI that the law permits or requires us to disclose may be further shared by recipients and is no longer protected by the law or the safeguards and restrictions in place when it is in The Practice’s possession. To obtain more information about your privacy rights or if you have questions you want answered about your privacy rights (as provided by Privacy Rule Section 164.520(b)(2)(vii)), you may contact the Practice’s HIPAA Compliance Officer as follows:
Mail: 32743 23 Mile Road Suite 210 Chesterfield, MI 48047
Phone: 586-725-3444
Amendments to this Notice/Privacy Policy – We reserve the right to revise or amend this Notice/Privacy Policy at any time. These revisions or amendments may be made effective for all protected health information we maintain even if created or received prior to the effective date of the revision or amendment. We will provide you with notice of any revisions or amendments to
this Privacy Policy, or changes in the law affecting this Privacy Notice, within 60 days of the effective date of such revision, amendment, or change.
PRACTICE’S REQUIREMENTS
The Practice is required to abide by the terms of this Privacy Notice.
The Practice reserves the right to change the terms of this Privacy Notice and to make the new Privacy Notice provisions effective for all of your PHI that it maintains.
The Practice will distribute any revised Privacy Notice to you prior to implementation.
The Practice will not retaliate against you for filing a complaint.
EFFECTIVE DATE
This Notice is in effect as of July 18, 2018,
and has been revised as of November 15, 2024
14004984.3
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