|

| |
NOTICE OF PRIVACY PRACTICES
EFFECTIVE APRIL 14, 2003
This notice describes how medical information about you may
be used and disclosed and how you can get access to this information. Please
review it carefully.
You have privacy rights under the Minnesota Government Data
Practices Act and the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability
Act (HIPAA). These laws protect your privacy but also let us give information
about you to others if the law requires it. We may tell you before we give the
information. These laws require us to keep your health information private and
to give you notice of our legal duties and practices to protect private
information. We must follow the terms that we have agreed to in this notice.
However, we can choose to change the terms of this notice. If we change the
terms of this notice, those changes will be applied to all present and future
information that we collect about you. We will tell you if we change the terms
of this notice.
With whom may we share information about you? We
may give information about you to the following agencies if they need it for
investigations or to help you or help us help you. We don’t always share
information about you with these people but the law says we may share
information with them. If you have questions about when we give these people
information, ask your worker.
- Minnesota Department of Human Services
- U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
- Other human service office, including child support
enforcement offices
- Mental health centers
- Health care providers
- State hospitals or long-term care facilities
- Ombudsman for mental health and mental retardation
- Insurance companies to check benefits you or your
children may get
- Hospitals if you, a friend or relative has an emergency
and we need to contact someone
- Internal Revenue Service
- County human service boards
- Fraud prevention and control units
- Anyone under contract with the Minnesota Department of
Human Services or U.S. Department of Health and Human Services or the county
social services agency
- Social Security Administration
- Minnesota Department of Economic Security
- Minnesota Department of Revenue
- Minnesota Department of Veteran Affairs
- Minnesota Department of Human Rights
- Others who may pay for your care
- County attorney, attorney general or other law
enforcement officials
- State and federal auditors
- Local collaborative agencies
- Guardian, conservator or person who has power of
attorney for you
- Ombudsman for families
- School districts
- Local and state health departments
- American Indian tribes, if your family is in need of
human services at a tribal reservation
- Immigration and Naturalization Service
- Employees or volunteers of any welfare agency who need
the information to do their jobs
- People who investigate child welfare or adjust protection
- Coroner/medical examiner, if you die and they
investigate your death
- Court officials
- Anyone else entitled under the law
to receive the information
If we intend to disclose your information to any third
party other than those listed above, we will request your written authorization
to do so. It is your right to refuse to do so.
You have the right to information we have about you.
- You may ask if we have any information about you and get
copies. You may have to pay for the copies.
- You may give other people permission to see and have
copies of private information about you.
- If we have collected health information about you, we
may use it only for the purposes that we have listed in this notice.
- You may question the accuracy of any information we have
about you.
- You have the right to ask us to share health information
with you in a certain way or in a certain place. For example, you may ask us
to send health information to your work address instead of your home address.
You must make this request in writing. You do not have to explain the basis
for your request. If we find that your request is reasonable, we will grant
it.
- You can ask us to restrict uses or disclosures of your
health information. Your request must be in writing. You must explain what
information you want to restrict from being disclosed and to whom you want
these restrictions to apply. You can request to end these restrictions at any
time by calling us or by writing to us. We are not required to agree to your
restrictions.
- You have the right to receive a record of the people or
organizations that we have shared your health information with. We must keep
a record of each time we share your health information for six years from the
date it was shared. This record will be stared on April 14, 2003. It will
NOT include those times when we have shared your information in order to
treat you, pay or bill for your health care services, or to run our programs.
If you want a copy of this record, you must send a request in writing to our
Privacy Official.
- You have the right to request an amendment to your
medical information. This request must be submitted to us in writing. If we
find that your request is reasonable, we will grant it. However, if we find
your request to be unreasonable, you have a right to an appeal.
- If you do not understand this information, you may ask
to have it explained to you.
What privacy rights do children have? If you are
under the age of 18, parents may see information about you and allow others to
see this information, unless you have asked that this information not be shared
with your parents or it involved medical treatment for which parental consent
was not required. You must make this request in writing and say what
information you want withheld and why. If the agency agrees that sharing the
information is not in your best interest, the information will not be shared wit
your parents. If the agency does not agree, the information will be shared with
your parents if they ask for it. When parental consent for medical treatment is
not required, information will not be shown to parents unless the health care
provider believes failing to share the information would jeopardize your health.
Filing complaints about your health information privacy
rights. If you believe that your health information privacy rights have
been violated, you may file a complaint. Write to the Minnesota Department of
Human Services, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services or Hennepin
Home Health Care at the address below. We cannot deny you services or treat you
badly because you have filed a complaint against us.
Privacy Official
Minnesota Department of Human Services
444 Lafayette Road North
St. Paul, MN 55155-3813
Phone: 651-296-5764
Office of Civil Rights
Medical Privacy, Complaint Division
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
200 Independence Avenue SW, HHH Building, Room 509H
Washington, DC 20201
Phone: 866-627-7748
TTY: 866-788-4989
Hennepin Home Health Care
Privacy Official
8590 Edinburgh Centre Drive Brooklyn
Park, MN 55443
Phone: 763-425-5959
|