A HIPAA authorization form gives covered entities permission to use protected health information for purposes other than treatment, payment, or health care operations. Continue reading to find out when authorization to disclose health information is needed.
The HIPAA Privacy Rule requires that an individual provide signed authorization to a covered entity , before the entity may use or disclose certain protected health information (PHI).
Under the Privacy Rule and in accordance with the minimum standards, doctors, nurses, hospitals, laboratory technicians, and other health care providers that are covered entities may use or disclose PHI (e.g., protected health information, X-rays, laboratory and pathology reports, diagnoses, and other medical information) without the patient’s authorization , for treatment purposes .
HIPAA regulations outline the uses and disclosures of PHI that require an authorization be obtained from a patient/plan member before that person’s PHI can be shared or used. HIPAA Authorization forms are required before:
The Privacy Rule defines psychotherapy notes as notes recorded by a health care provider who is a mental health professional documenting or analyzing the contents of a conversation during a private counseling session or a group, joint, or family counseling session . These notes are separate from the rest of the patient’s medical record .
Psychotherapy notes do not include any information about:
Psychotherapy notes contain particularly sensitive information. These notes constitute the personal notes of the therapist – notes that that usually are not required or useful for treatment, payment, or health care operations purposes (other than by the mental health professional who created the notes)
Therefore, the Privacy Rule generally requires a covered entity to obtain a patient’s authorization prior to a disclosure of psychotherapy notes for any reason , including a disclosure for treatment purposes to a health care provider other than the originator of the notes .
Generally, covered entities cannot use or disclose substance abuse and treatment records, without patient authorization.
There are two exceptions to this rule:
For the particular purpose of treating a patient with a substance abuse disorder , HIPAA permits disclosure of protected health information (PHI) without patient consent. PHI may also be used or disclosed without patient authorization to lessen a threat of serious and imminent harm to the health or safety of the patient or others .
The law requires that a HIPAA authorization form contain specific “core elements” to be valid. In a HIPAA agreement form, these elements include:
In addition to the core elements, the HIPAA authorization must contain statements adequate to place the individual on notice of all of the following:
HIPAA regulations also require that the HIPAA authorization must be written in plain language on the HIPAA form.
In addition, whenever a covered entity seeks a HIPAA authorization from an individual for a PHI use or disclosure, the covered entity must provide the individual with a copy of the signed HIPAA form authorization.