Title: Part III
1Part III HIPAA Reference
- HIPAA In General
- Background
- Why Employers Should Care ?
- Overview of Requirements
- EDI Transaction Standards
- Security
- Privacy
- HIPAA Compliance Implementation
2BackgroundIn General
- Enacted in 1996, HIPAA was to incrementally
address various issues within the health care
industry - Major elements include
- Improved health coverage portability requirements
- Prohibitions on discrimination based on health
status - Increased fraud enforcement
- Simplifying health care claim payment process to
reduce administrative costs - Primarily by standardizing electronic data
transactions, which raises security and privacy
concerns
3Background Statutory Structure
HIPAA
Title I
Title II
Title V
Title IV
Title III
Guarantees health insurance portability and
renewal
Administrative simplification
Tax provision for medical savings accounts
Enforcement of group health plan provisions
Revenue offset provisions
4BackgroundWhy was HIPAA Needed?
- Healthcare industry
- Need for ease of data transfer
- Move from paper to EDI (electronic data
interchange) - Economic reasons
- The patient as the consumer
- Increasing privacy and confidentiality concerns
- Legislative issues
- 50 different states, with different laws, lack of
consistency with no minimum floor
5Why Employers Should Care?In General
- Although not a covered entity, any employer that
provides group health benefits will be at least
indirectly affected - Employers with self-funded plans will be
considered hybrid entities and their health
plan operations will be directly subject to the
rules - Company access to employee health plan records
for employment reasons (including administration
of other benefit plans and laws) will be further
limited - Federal preemption of state laws will be limited
to establishing minimum floor protection - Certain customary practices may have to be changed
6Why Employers Should Care? Penalties
Civil Monetary Penalties
100 for each violation 25,000 maximum per
year, per violation
7Why Employers Should Care?Compliance Deadlines
- HIPAAs administrative simplification
incorporates three major distinct but overlapping
components, each with different compliance
deadlines - Electronic transaction standards
- Generally 10/16/03
- Privacy
- Generally 4/14/03
- Security
- Generally 4/21/05
- For more information
- http//aspe.hhs.gov/adminsimp.Index.htm
- http//www.hhs.gov/ocr/hipaa
- http//www.ibiweb.org/news/HIPAA
8EDI Transaction StandardsIn General
- HIPAA requires standardization of these
electronic health care transactions - Health claims or similar encounter information
- Enrollment disenrollment in a health plan
- Eligibility for a health plan
- Health care payment remittance advice
- Health plan premium payments
- Health claim status
- Referral certification authorization
- Health claims attachments (to be issued in the
future) - First report of injury (to be issued in the
future)
9EDI Transaction Points of Contact
Patient/Consumer
Payers
Sponsors
Need HC Insurance (Form)
Enrollment (834)
Non-HIPAA Transaction
Payroll Deduction
Invoice (811)
Premium Pmt (820)
Eligibility (270)
Response (271)
Referral (278)
Response (278)
Claim (837)
Need more info (277)
Claim Inquiry (276)
Response (277)
Payment EOB (835)
EOB (Paper)
10EDI Transaction StandardsUnique Identifiers
- Eventually HIPAA will require use of unique
identifying numbers for employers and for covered
entities (i.e., health plans, providers, and
clearinghouses) - To date, only the employer identifier standards
have been finalized (the employers federal tax
identification number must be used) - The controversial use of an unique identifier for
employees has been withdrawn
11SecurityIn General
- Intended to minimize risk of intentional or
accidental disclosure or misuse, or the loss or
corruption of patient-identifiable health
information - Sets a floor of minimum administrative, physical,
and computer security standards to protect
medical data - Reflects commonly accepted security safeguards
widely used across many industries - Security measures to be tailored to
organizations risk analyses, technical
environment, and business needs
12SecurityEmployer Implications
- Typically, will require developing and/or
modifying a number of IT/IS policies, procedures,
and protocols with respect to individual health
information that is generated, transmitted, or
stored electronically - With respect to both the covered entity and its
business associates - Thus, early involvement of IT/IS staff in an
employers HIPAA compliance effort is critical - Not uncommon for employers to engage a
specialized IT/IS consultant to help assess
compliance gaps and implement corrective steps
13PrivacyIn General
- Rules apply to all individually
patient-identifiable health information whether
in paper or electronic form - Key terms
- Protected Health Information (PHI)
- Covered Entity
- Business Associate
14PrivacyProtected Health Information
- PHI individually identifiable health
information created or received by a covered
entity - Individually identifiable health information
- Any information that relates to an individuals
past, present, or future physical or mental
condition, or the provision or payment of health
care, and - That specifically identifies the individual (or
there is a reasonable belief that the individual
can be identified), AND WHICH IS - Created or received by a covered entity
- Can be in any form (oral, written, or electronic)
- Examples claims data, and (depending on source)
enrollment data, and employee contribution
information
15PrivacyDe-Identification Requirements
- Covered entities are permitted to use PHI to
create de-identified information for its own
unlimited use or for unlimited use by another
entity without authorization from individuals - De-identified information health care
information which does not identify the
individual or that which the covered entity has
no reasonable basis to believe can be used to
identify the individual - While use of such generic information may be
useful for certain types of broad based trend
studies, it is probably not useful to achieve
most other business objectives - Use of certain types of partially de-identified
information (summary information or limited data
sets) allowed for specific limited purposes - Enrollment/disenrollment data
- Aggregate claims history / expenses / types of
claims data for coverage renewals and plan design
changes
16PrivacyCovered Entity
- All health care providers
- All health care payers (including managed care
organizations, carriers, and self-funded
employers) - All health care clearinghouses that process
claims, or route electronic claims - Certain health plans
- Health insurers (including HMOs), and
- Group health plans with 50 participants or
administered by an entity other than the employer
that established and maintains the plan
17PrivacyCovered Entity (cont.)
- Employers, as a whole, typically are not covered
entities - Thus, most employers are not directly subject to
HIPAA privacy regulations - However, certain components of an employer might
constitute a covered entity (e.g., self-funded
group health plan) - Hybrid employers will be subject to various
requirements and obligations - Firewalls must be created between covered and
non-covered functions - Plan cannot share PHI with non-health plan
component of employer unless plan sponsor
certifies plan has been amended to limit use and
disclosure of PHI and that safeguards are in
place - Exceptions for limited enrollment activities
18PrivacyBusiness Associates
- Business associate any outside entity to which
covered entities disclose PHI to perform
necessary functions - E.g., third-party administrators, case managers,
attorneys, collection agencies, claims auditors,
consultants - Does not include plan sponsors, insurers,
disclosures from a covered entity to a health
care provider for treatment of an individual - Covered entities must have agreements in place to
contractually bind BAs to limit use of PHI to
designated purposes and to comply with covered
entity-type of confidentiality rules
19PrivacyBusiness Associates (cont.)
- Covered entities have potential civil and
criminal liability exposure for breaches by BAs - Thus, there is an obligation to monitor your BAs
activities - Under final regulations, however, action needs to
be taken only if there is actual knowledge of
material violation - Compliance deadline
- Generally, all BA agreements must be in place by
4/14/03 - However, any BA agreements in place prior to
10/15/02 will be deemed sufficient until 4/14/04
(unless the agreement terminates or is modified
in any way prior to that date)
20PrivacyBasic Requirements
- Patients have the right to understand and control
how their health information is being used - Providers and health plans to give individuals
clear, written notice of how they use, keep, and
disclose their health information - Individuals have right to access their medical
records (to view, make copies, request
amendments, and obtain accounting for non-routine
disclosures) - Individual authorizations required before
information is released in most non-routine
situations - Covered entities accountable for use and release
of information, with recourse available if
privacy is violated
21PrivacyBasic Requirements (cont.)
- Use of individual health information generally
limited to health purposes - PHI cannot be used for purposes other than
treatment, payment, or health care operations
without individual authorization - Individual authorizations must be informed and
voluntary - Reasonable efforts must be undertaken to limit
release of information to minimum necessary
amount - Minimum necessary amount requirement applies to
use of protected health information for payment
or health plan operations, but not for treatment
purposes
22PrivacyBasic Requirements (cont.)
- Minimum privacy safeguard standards established
for covered entities (with similar requirement
applicable to BAs by contract and plan sponsor by
plan amendment) - Adoption of written privacy procedures, with
safeguards and sanctions specified - Periodic distribution of privacy notice
- Training of employees on handling PHI
- Designation of a privacy officer (covered
entities only) - Establishment of a grievance / complaint
procedure - Recordkeeping with respect to PHI disclosures
23HIPAA ImplementationBasic Phases
- Phase I
- Awareness / Education
- Preliminary scope assessment
- Budgeting
- Task force team selection
- Phase II
- Detailed current PHI flow and use analysis
- Detailed compliance gap analysis
- Phase III
- Implementation of prioritized action item list