Dr's Lubitz and Lamping, Inc.
Privacy Policy
It is the policy of our practice that all
physicians and staff preserve the integrity and the confidentiality
of protected health information (PHI) pertaining to our patients.
The purpose of this policy is to ensure that our practice and
its physicians and staff have the necessary medical and PHI to
provide the highest quality medical care possible while protecting
the confidentiality of the PHI of our patients to the highest
degree possible. Patients should not fear about providing information
to our practice and its physicians and staff for purpose of treatment,
payment and healthcare operations (TPO). To that end, our practice
and its physicians and staff will:
- Adhere to the standards set forth in
the Notice of Privacy Practices.
- Collect, use and disclose PHI only in
conformance with state and federal laws and current patient covenants
and/or authorizations, as appropriate. Our practice and its
physicians and staff will not use or disclose PHI for uses outside
our practice's TPO such as marketing, employment, life insurance
applications, etc. without an authorization from the patient.
- Use and disclose PHI to remind patients
of their appointments only within their consent.
- Recognize that PHI collected about patients
must be accurate, timely, complete, and available when needed.
Our practice and its physicians and staff will:
- Implement reasonable measures to protect
the integrity of all PHI maintained about patients.
- Recognize that patients have a right
to privacy. Our practice and its physicians and staff respect
the patient's individual dignity at all times. Our practice
and its physicians and staff will respect patient's privacy to
the extent consistent with providing the highest quality medical
care possible and with the efficient administration of the facility.
- Act as responsible information stewards
and treat all PHI as sensitive and confidential. Consequently,
our practice and it physicians and staff will:
- Treat all PHI data as confidential in
accordance with professional ethics, accreditation standards,
and legal requirements.
- Not disclose PHI data unless the patient
(or his or her authorized representative has properly consented
to or authorized the release or the release is otherwise authorized
by law.
- Recognize that, although our practice
"owns" the medical record, the patient has a right
to inspect and obtain a copy of his/her PHI. In addition, patients
have a right to request an amendment to his/her medical record
if he/she believes his/her information is inaccurate or incomplete.
Our practice and its physicians and staff will:
- Permit patients access to their medical
records when their written requests are approved by our practice.
If we deny their request, then we must inform the patients that
they may request a review of our denial. In such cases, we will
have an on-site healthcare professional review the patients'
appeals.
- Provide patients an opportunity to request
the correction of inaccurate or incomplete PHI in their medical
records in accordance with the law and professional standards.
- All physicians and staff of our practice
will maintain a list of all disclosures of PHI for purposes other
than TPO for each patient. We will provide this list to patients
upon request, so long as their requests are in writing.
- All physicians and staff of our practice
will adhere to any restrictions concerning the use or disclosure
of PHI that patients have requested and have been approved by
our practice.
- All physicians and staff of our practice
must adhere to this policy. Our practice will not tolerate violations
of this policy. Violation of this policy is grounds for disciplinary
action, up to and including termination of employment and criminal
or professional sanctions in accordance with our practice's personnel
rules and regulation.
- Our practice may change this privacy policy
in the future. Any changes will be effective upon the release
of a revised privacy policy and will be made available to patients
upon request.
Drs. Lubitz and Lamping, Inc. cares for
patients from early childhood through adulthood. We may at times
request that parents allow us time to speak privately with their
teenager regarding health issues. It's important that your child/teen
knows that we will uphold his or her confidence. It's also important
that you and your child/teen know that we will advise you of any
behavior that might be life threatening.
- When a parent agrees to a confidential
relationship between the minor and the physician, the parent
does not have access to the health information related to that
conversation or relationship. For example, if a physician asks
the parent of a 16 year old if the physician can talk with the
child confidentially about a medical condition and the parent
agrees, the parent would not control the PHI that was discussed
during that confidential conference.
- When a physician (or other covered entity)
reasonably believes in his or her professional judgment that
the child has been or may be subjected to abuse or neglect, or
that treating the parent as the child's personal representative
could endanger the child, the physician may choose not to treat
the parent as the personal representative of the child.