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Date: | Wed, 8 Jan 2003 00:46:07 -0800 |
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If our nations health insurance companys view pregnancy as a medical
condition,
then I think that the HIPPA privacy rules would apply regarding not
sharing a patients
medical condition or status with a third party.
Could this reasoning be used to stop doctors offices from giving out
this private
patient information?
In order to circumvent HIPPA, mothers would be asked to sign a release
or opt out
of the privacy act. Writing Health and Human Services and CMS, formerly
Medicare and Medicaid may result in them warning physicians that sharing
patients
names put them on formula company lists without their permission means
they are
out of compliance with HIPPA.
Just a thought.
Just having a state Medicaid processing number for selling breast
prosthesis and
mastectomy bras makes us obligated to comply with HIPPA for DME, durable
medical equipment. We suppliers, just like doctors, are afraid to be
censured
for HIPPA violations.
Judy Ritchie
Date: Tue, 7 Jan 2003 22:51:33 -0500
From: Ellen Mahony <[log in to unmask]>
Subject: Disgust at formula companies
I think the obstetrical offices are putting mothers on formula lists,
so I intend to start complaining there, too. Any other ideas on how
mothers get put on lists?
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