Privacy: R.I.P.
by
Paul Hein
The
Washington gang must have passed some sort of privacy law recently,
judging by the number of "privacy notices" I’ve received
from my health insurer, broker, and banker.
I
haven’t paid much attention to them, for a couple of reasons: I
don’t need these people to tell me what my rights are, and my broker
and banker are among the principal violators of my privacy. It’s
ludicrous to think they would protect it.
However,
today I got a "Notice Of Privacy Practices" from my drug
store! I found this so remarkable that I actually took time to read
the almost five-page document. The pharmacy, it appears, keeps information
about me, referred to as PHI (protected health information). The
Notice describes how "we may use and disclose PHI about you
to carry out treatment, payment or health care operations and for
other specified purposes." The Notice also states that the
pharmacy will not "use or disclose PHI about you without your
written authorization, except as described in this Notice. We reserve
the right to change the Notice." Gee, my privacy is secured
by rivets made of Jell-O! The use of the word "protected"
in Protected Health Information evidently means protected from me.
The
Notice then proceeds to list my rights: "You have the right
to request additional restrictions on our use or disclosure of PHI
about you by sending a written request to (us)." Aha! My privacy
assured! Oops here’s the next sentence: "We are not
required to agree to those restrictions." Oh, well.
I
also have the right to "access and copy PHI about you contained
in a designated record set for as long as the Pharmacy maintains
the PHI. We may deny your request to inspect and
copy in certain limited circumstances." Ah, but if my request
is denied, I can request a review!!! I suspect THAT request could
be denied, also.
But
if the information in my PHI is incorrect, I "may request an
amendment. To request an amendment, you must send a written request
to (us). In addition, you must include a reason that supports your
request. In certain cases, we may deny your request for amendment."
But I have the "right" to file a statement of disagreement
if my request is denied. I’m breathing easier!
The
pharmacy may make disclosures of my PHI to "friends or family
members involved in your care." I have the "right to receive
an accounting of the disclosures we have made of PHI about you for
most purposes other than treatment, payment, or health care operations."
This right to an accounting is "subject to certain other exceptions,
restrictions, and limitations." Why am I not surprised?
Of
course, I can get tired of this whole run-around, and simply insist
that the pharmacy stop disclosing information about me. I have that
right: it says so right in the Notice: "You may revoke a consent
in writing at any time. Upon receipt of the written revocation,
we will stop using or disclosing PHI about you, except to the extent
that we have already taken action in reliance on the consent. We
may refuse to continue to treat a customer that revokes his or her
consent." That means finding another drug store, and guess
what? another Notice! And I cringe at that word "treat."
I don’t want to be "treated" by the drug store!
Well,
what, exactly, is the pharmacy going to do with this PHI of mine?
According to the Notice, it is "likely" that it will be
provided to insurance companies, business associates (of the pharmacy,
such as billing agencies, but they will be "required"
to safeguard the PHI!!) to family members, other relatives, close
friends, or any person I identify, to the FDA, regarding adverse
effects, to Worker’s Compensation, to public health or legal authorities
concerned with preventing disease, to law enforcement, pursuant
to a valid subpoena, to health oversight activity agencies, to courts,
again pursuant to subpoena, or "administrative order,"
to researchers (who will guarantee my privacy, however!), to coroners,
medical examiners, and funeral directors, to organ banks, fundraisers
(!), correctional institutions, the military, "authorized federal
officials for intelligence, counterintelligence, and other national
security activities," to authorized federal officials so that
may provide "protection to the President," his cronies,
and foreign heads-of-state, and to a social service agency regarding
abuse, neglect, or domestic violence.
In
other words, my "protected" health information can be
made available to hundreds of nameless persons, for reasons so vague
as to be hard to challenge, and interpreted by others, not me. The
whole absurd business is given an aura of propriety, if not actual
legality, by describing it in a wordy "notice." That makes
it OK, of course! I shudder to think what would happen if my health
information weren’t protected.
That
which the government would destroy it first legislates to "protect!"
May
16, 2003
Dr.
Hein [send
him mail] is a semi-retired ophthalmologist in St. Louis,
and the author of All
Work & No Pay.
Copyright
© 2003 LewRockwell.com
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