If you work in healthcare, the initials HIPAA make you gag. If you are not in healthcare, you are probably unaware of this 2000-pound hippopotamus that you are supporting.
HIPAA stands for Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (of 1998). In the early 1990s, there was extensive corporate downsizing, reductions in force (RIF) were common events, and people lost their insurance along with their jobs. The initiating stimulus for this legislation was to make insurance portable, hence the “P” in HIPAA: you could take your insurance with you when you left your job. Gradually, the transfer of medical information became the focus. In this time of the Patriot Act, confidentiality and security were (and remain) king. Eventually, the original problem of loss of medical insurance was “lost” and forgotten.
HIPAA now sets forth guidelines about protection of personal medical data. It hints at dire consequences if medical confidentiality is broached. HIPAA produces defensive behaviors by both individuals and institutions to avoid governmental wrath. Examples include the following.
• Shields in your dentist’s office prevent you from seeing the computer screen.
• Hospitals charts have no names on outside.
• Each year, millions of useless hours are spent doing HIPAA Compliance Training.
• I am prohibited from emailing medical information to a colleague.
• It is impossible to be in compliance both with HIPAA and the Patriot Act.
In a contest between sharing medical information, and (supposed) protection of medical confidentiality, the latter has won hands down. Every hospital lawyer and a host of regulations make it difficult-to-impossible to do something that should be free, easy and encouraged: communication between medical caregivers.
What about the cost? The direct financial cost is in the hundreds of millions of dollars each year. No one has a clue about the indirect costs, such as errors because of confused or incomplete communication; inability to learn because information is sequestered; and lawsuits either for releasing protected information or for NOT releasing needed information. Guess who pays for HIPAA the hippo. You do. What do you get for all the money, mistakes, hassle and frustration?
We all know how hard it is to reverse a decision that has already been implemented. This is particularly true of Congressional Acts, which seem to be unkillable. Nonetheless, if there ever was law that needs to go away, that has proven to have a huge cost – in money and system disruption – for virtually no gain to anyone, it is the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act.
Shoot HIPAA the hippo.
System MD
Tweet This Post
Buzz This Post
Delicious
Digg This Post
Facebook
Stumble This Post
- No related posts





3 comments ↓
[...] HIPAA the hippo is new low. Originally intended to protect us from losing our health insurance, HIPAA is now supposed to secure our medical privacy, but doesn’t. It costs hundreds of millions of dollars, and the only thing it produces is medical errors. The systems Stinkers’ solution made things worse. [...]
[...] HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act) was passed by Congress and implemented by several regulatory agencies. It makes it difficult to share medical information. Coupled with the medical malpractice litigation statutes interpreted by each Hospital Counsel, wide dissemination of medical information, especially about adverse outcomes, is virtually impossible. But isn’t that the way we learn how to avoid mistakes? So, mistakes continue – patients suffer, and whose fault is that? Who is practicing medicine here, and doing it badly? Examples are endless. The fact is that medicine is a complex team sport. It is a process, not a mom-and-pop operation (forgive the pun). Financial, managerial, legal, and operational decisions impact outcomes that patients experience at least as much as strictly medical decisions. Only those with MD after their names are considered to be “practicing medicine” and only they are held responsible. [...]
[...] is the cost/benefit ratio for HIPAA? Answer: no one knows, least of all the people who passed the legislation. Does anyone care if, by [...]
Leave a Comment