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3 Parts to Every Privacy Awareness Training Plan

Posted on June 15, 2020 by Jean Eaton in Blog, Clinic Manager / Privacy Officer, Employee, Established Practice, New Practice, Services

Reasonable Safeguards – the Myth

You may have heard the myth that the Health Information Act (HIA) is a big scary thing that will interrupt your routine, rob you of countless billable hours, impact all of your staff, turn your office inside out, and change the way that you run your entire business!

Myth Buster

The HIA provides structure and framework for reasonable safeguards that apply to any healthcare business.

One of the requirements of reasonable safeguards includes having a privacy awareness training plan.

     
Privacy Awareness Training

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Privacy Awareness Training

Your Privacy Awareness Training Plan should include learning objectives throughout the year, including

  • Orientation – Standardized training curriculum provided to everyone in you healthcare practice at the time of employment. This is often included during a new employee’s orientation period.
  • Specific – Privacy training that is more detailed and specific to the roles and responsibilities of that individual’s job in your healthcare practice. There may also be specific training when new software, technology, or procedures are introduced anytime throughout the employment.
  • Reward – Keep privacy awareness top of mind all year long. Recognize and reward when individuals follow privacy principles that also add value to your client satisfaction or business efficiency.

It is reasonable to expect regular privacy awareness training, especially at orientation, and a formal review annually.

What a Privacy Awareness Training Plan Can Do For You

When you implement regular privacy awareness training, you will see:

  • Privacy and security expectations clearly communicated among your team.
  • Team members demonstrate their commitment to privacy, confidentiality, security of personal health information.
  • Efficient practices that protect the privacy and save you time and money
  • Team members confidently and correctly handle personal health information using reasonable safeguards

Are You a Myth-Buster?

You can be a myth-buster, too, and implement privacy awareness training in your healthcare practice.

You can easily implement reasonable safeguards and meet HIA requirements to ensure privacy, confidentiality, and security of health information that saves you time, frustration and money.

If you need a little help, I have written a practical privacy awareness training course designed for the community health care practice. This is ideal for orientation of new employees and a refresher for the rest of us.

Privacy Awareness in Healthcare: Essentials

Understand basic health care privacy principles and how to handle personal information, use safeguards, and recognize and report a privacy breach.

Ideal for community-based health care professionals and staff, direct care providers, or anyone working with a health care, dental, or social services organization.

An effective privacy compliance program promotes organizational adherence to the Health Information Act (HIA), Personal Information Protection Act (PIPA) Alberta, Personal Health Information Protection Act (PHIPA) Ontario and the Personal Information Protection of Electronic Documents Act (PIPEDA) requirements. A compliance program is your first line of defense to promote the prevention of criminal conduct, and enforce government rules and regulations, while providing quality care to patients. All three training products help protect practices against privacy and security breaches, improper payments, fraud and abuse, and other potential liability areas through education.

Canadian Health Care Privacy Training Solutions

Corridor’s online training makes it easy for health care organizations to comply with provincial and federal legislation that mandates regular privacy training for all health care providers, staff, and vendors.

Select the training that best fits your needs:

NEW! Privacy Awareness in Healthcare Training: Dental Practices – Alberta

Dentists and dental practices in Alberta are required to have an ongoing privacy program to ensure the protection of private records and patient information. The appropriate collection, use, and disclosure of personal information is critical to maintaining privacy for patients that choose to trust in your practice. Accomplishing this important goal demands an up-to-date training strategy.

Privacy Awareness in Health Care Training – Canada

Includes detailed resources for each province and territory with key terminology and links to applicable privacy legislation. Resources are provided for our ten provinces: Alberta, British Columbia, Manitoba, New Brunswick, Newfoundland & Labrador, Nova Scotia, Ontario, Prince Edward Island, Quebec, Saskatchewan, and three territories: Northwest Territories, Nunavut and Yukon. This new product is ideal for both organizations and vendors who provide health care services or have health care clients in more than one province.

Privacy Awareness in Health Care Training – Alberta 

Includes the mandatory privacy breach notification amendments to the Health Information Act (HIA).

Privacy Awareness in Health Care Training – Ontario

Specifically covers all legislation and rules specific to the province of Ontario including the Personal Health Information Protection Act (PHIPA).

Refresher: Privacy Awareness in Health Care – Alberta

A quiz-based review of Corridor’s full Privacy Awareness course. The Refresher starts with an initial quiz to assess knowledge on the topics and information covered in the full course. Based on the quiz results, one or more of eight Refresher topic quizzes must be completed, each focusing on a specific subject area. The Refresher also includes access to the original course content.

 

Privacy Awareness in Healthcare: Essentials

Grab your on-line course from Information Managers and Corridor Interactive

for just $30 per individual 3 month subscription now!

Click Here to Grab Your On-Line Privacy Awareness Course Now!
Alberta, Canada, Corridor Interactive, dental, Health Information Act, Ontario, Personal Health Information Protection Act (PHIPA), PHIPA, PIPEDA, privacy awareness training, reasonable safeguards

Privacy Principles Applies After Death

Posted on August 5, 2019 by Jean Eaton in Blog

Are your staff looking at medical records when they shouldn’t be?

Many people have the mistaken impression they can look at a patient's medical records as long as they don’t tell anyone else.

You can’t.

We see over and over again in ‘snooping’ cases where seasoned and new healthcare providers and support team members don’t realize that looking at patient’s health information without a need to know that information to provide a health service right away is wrong.

Kate Dewhirst summarized this as

  • Privacy = don’t look
  • Confidentiality = don’t tell

We still need privacy awareness training – even those experienced healthcare providers who push back and say that they have been in the business for years still often have more to learn.

Yes, we still need privacy awareness training Click to Tweet

In this post I am sharing an example of the Ontario’s Information Privacy Commissioner (IPC) complaint investigation from the family of a deceased individual. Whether you have a new practice, or an existing practice, we have a number of services and resources designed to help you manage your practice in a way that not only meets legal requirements, but is streamlined and efficient, and keep your information secure.

What Happened

In 2014, a physician acting in his role as a coroner, accessed the deceased’s health record. Shortly thereafter, the family alleged that the physician, who was also a family member of the deceased, continued to access the deceased’s personal health information (PHI) contrary to Ontario’s Personal Health Information Protection Act (PHIPA).

The family submitted a complaint to the hospital. Initially, the hospital's response did not satisfy the family. The family filed a complaint to the Information and Privacy Commissioner (IPC) of Ontario.

The IPC started a complaint investigation.

Privacy Breach Investigation

Privacy Complaint Investigation

Under PHIPA, the hospital is a health information custodian and the physician is an agent of the hospital.

During the IPC investigation, the physician confirmed he “accessed the health information in response to his concern about the individual’s well-being.”

“I know now that proceeding in this way was misguided and wrong.” He would never disclose the information to anyone; that would be a violation of patient privacy and a breach of doctor – patient confidentiality.

The physician acknowledged he did not fully appreciate the related but distinct concepts of patient privacy, the circle of care, and the ‘need to know’ principle.

Confidentiality rights arise out the special relationship between the client and the health professional or provider.

In contrast, privacy rights are the general rights of all persons to limit the access to their PHI. Individuals have the right to privacy, even after death.

Individuals have the right to #privacy, even after death. Click to Tweet

4 Step Response Plan

The hospital received a complaint from the family, which triggers the first step to spot and stop the breach.

Secondly, the hospital did an initial investigation to evaluate the risks of the incident. Later, after the IPC initiated their complaint investigation, the hospital re-visited the internal investigation and completed a comprehensive review and used audit log reporting tools to assist them.

Eventually, the hospital took the third step and notified the individuals’ family of the privacy breach. However, the notification was not timely. A more comprehensive response to the families’ complaint, followed by a notice to the family may have provided a better response.

Preventing a similar breach is the fourth step.

Since this incident, the hospital has:

  • installed a new auditing program that considerably enhances its ability to detect unauthorized access.
  • updated its Privacy and Confidentiality Policy, which applies to all agents of the hospital.
  • developed a yearly electronic privacy training program for all staff, volunteers and learners and will require all credentialed physicians to complete this training as part of the annual reappointment process.
  • strengthened the privacy warning on its electronic system, which warns users that unauthorized use of personal health information may result in disciplinary action.

Privacy Breach Physician Sanctions

 

The hospital’s Medical Advisory Committee recommended to the Board of Directors that the physician’s privileges be suspended for three months, that the hospital conduct enhanced monitoring of the physician’s access to the electronic medical record for three years, and that, on his return to practice, the physician be required to present at Grand Rounds on the topic of privacy.

The IPC concluded that the disciplinary consequences for the physician were sufficient in the circumstances.

Privacy Breach Nuggets You Need to Know

Privacy breaches are in the news every day. The more you know how breaches can affect you allows you to be more proactive to prevent privacy breach pain.

Privacy awareness education is more than just having policies and procedures. Demonstrating good practices, regular discussion about examples, and even gamification helps to ensure that all members of your healthcare team understand their roles and responsibilities.

If you need to start or update your privacy awareness training program, check out the on-line education Privacy Awareness in Healthcare: Essentials.

If you need to start or update your privacy breach management program, check out the 4 Step Response Plan; Prevent Privacy Breach Plan.

When we know better, we can do better…

I’ve helped hundreds of healthcare practices prevent privacy breach pain like this. If you would like to discuss how I can help your practice, just send me an email. I am here to help you protect your practice.

PRIVACY BREACH NUGGETS are provided to help you add a ‘nugget' to your privacy education program. Share these with your staff and patients as a newsletter, poster, or staff meeting.

Jean L. Eaton, Your Practical Privacy Coach

Click Here To Register for the FREE Training Video "Can You Spot the Privacy Breach?"

References and Resources

Dewhirst, Kate. After Death: Who Can Access The Records Of A Patient After Death? May 7, 2019. https://katedewhirst.com/blog/2019/05/07/after-death-who-can-access-the-records-of-a-patient-after-death/

Ontario Information and Privacy Commissioner IPC Investigation Report PHIPA DECISION 74 HC15-4 Sault Area Hospital August 10, 2018.

#PrivacyBreachNugget, 4 Step Response Plan, clinic, complaint investigation, death, deceased, healthcare, IPC, medical, Ontario, PHIPA, privacy, privacy after death, privacy awareness training, privacy breach, privacy breach nugget, privacy principles

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