January 28, 2021
As its days dwindle down, the administration is mobilizing for one final push to reduce what it perceives to be unnecessarily burdensome regulation, including on the medical privacy front. On December 10, the HHS Office for Civil Rights (OCR) issued a notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) to modify the HIPAA and HITECH Act Privacy Rule.
The Proposed Privacy Act Changes
As with the recent kickback regulations, the OCR Privacy Rule initiative is designed to clear the path for value-based health care. Specifically, the NPRM proposes to modify the Privacy Rule to expand the scope of permissible disclosures of protected health information (PHI), i.e., PHI disclosures permitted without the individual’s consent, to include disclosures that will promote care coordination and case management communications among individuals and labs, hospitals and other HIPAA covered entities. Key changes proposed:
Takeaway
The deadline to comment on the NPRM is March 11, 60 days after its publication in the Federal Register. If it’s finalized—and that’s a big “if” considering that a new administration will be in control—the final rule would take effect 60 days after it’s published. Labs and other covered entities and their business associates would have until the “compliance date” to establish and implement policies and practices to achieve compliance with any new or modified standards. Among other things, you’d then have to:
NIR will keep an eye on things and explain how to do each of the above when and if it appears that the changes are really going to happen.
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This article originally appeared in G2 Intelligence, National Intelligence Report, January 2021.
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