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NOTICE OF PRIVACY
PRACTICES
I. 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.
"Medical information", as used in the
paragraph above, may not completely describe the
type of information Saint John Vianney Center
may use and disclose. Information about your
past, present, or future health or condition,
the provision of health care or other services
to you, or payment for services rendered, if
such information does or could be used to
identify you, is considered "Protected Health
Information" ("PHI") under the Federal Health
Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of
1996 ("HIPAA") and federal regulations issued
thereunder (collectively, the "HIPAA Privacy
Rule"). Included in your PHI, for example, are
your treatment or service records, your name and
address, and your insurance or other health
benefit information. This Notice describes
potential uses and disclosures of your PHI, as
well as your rights with respect to your PHI.
II. Our Duty to Safeguard Your Protected
Health Information.
Under the HIPAA Privacy Rule, Saint John Vianney
Center is required to extend certain protections to
your PHI, and to give you this notice about our
privacy practices that explains how, when and why
we may use or disclose your PHI. Except in
specified circumstances, we must use or disclose
only the minimum PHI to accomplish the purpose of
the use or disclosure.
We are required to follow the privacy practices
described in this notice, though we reserve the
right to change our privacy practices and the terms
of this Notice at any time. If we do so, we
will post a new notice at the facility. You may
request a copy of any new notice by contacting Pat
Rugh or Pat Bogusch, the facility privacy officers,
at 610-269-2600.
III. How We May Use and Disclose Your
Protected Health Information.
We use and disclose PHI for a variety of
reasons. For some uses and disclosures, we must
have your written authorization, for others, no
authorization is required. However, the law
provides that we are permitted to make some
uses/disclosures without your written
authorization. The following offers more
description and examples of our potential
uses/disclosures of your PHI.
- Uses and Disclosures Relating to
Treatment, Payment, or Health Care Operations.
- For Services: We may disclose
your PHI to facility staff members,
volunteers, and other service delivery
personnel who are involved in providing your
services. We may also disclose your PHI to
other affiliated facilities and service
providers in order to ensure the provision of
additional or modified services to you.
- To obtain payment: We may
use/disclose your PHI in order to bill and
collect payment for your services. For
example, we may release portions of your PHI
to Medicaid, a private insurance plan, or a
state office to get paid for services that we
delivered to you.
- For service operations: We may
use/disclose your PHI in the course of
operating our facility. For example, we may
use your PHI in evaluating the quality of
services provided, or disclose your PHI to
our accountant or attorney for audit
purposes. Since we are an integrated system,
we may disclose your PHI to designated staff
in our central office for similar
administrative and operational purposes.
Release of your PHI to the county, state,
and/or the Medicaid agency might also be
necessary to determine your eligibility for
publicly funded services.
- Uses and Disclosures Requiring
Authorization: For uses and disclosures
beyond treatment, payment and operations
purposes we are required to have your written
authorization, unless the use or disclosure
falls within one of the exceptions described
below. Should an authorization be required, you
or your authorized representative will be asked
to sign the facility's standard authorization
form. Once signed, authorizations can be revoked
in writing at any time to stop future
uses/disclosures, except to the extent that we
have already undertaken an action in reliance
upon your authorization.
- Uses and Disclosures Not Requiring
Authorization: The law provides that we may
use/disclose your PHI without a written
authorization in the following circumstances:
- When required by law: We may
disclose PHI when a law requires that we
report information about a suspected abuse,
neglect or domestic violence, or relating to
suspected criminal activity, or in response
to a court order. We must also disclose PHI
to authorities who monitor compliance with
these privacy requirements.
- For public health activities: We
may disclose PHI when we are required to
collect information about disease or injury,
or to report vital statistics to the public
health authority.
- For health oversight activities:
We may disclose PHI to an accrediting
organization or another agency responsible
for monitoring the health care system for
such purposes as reporting or investigation
of unusual incidents.
- Related to decedents: we may
disclose PHI relating to an individual's
death to coroners, medical examiners or
funeral directors, and to organ procurement
organizations relating to organ, eye or
tissue donations or transplants.
- To avert threat to health or safety:
In order to avoid a serious threat to
health or safety, we may disclose PHI as
necessary to law enforcement or other persons
who can reasonably prevent or lessen the
threat of harm.
- For specific government functions:
We may disclose PHI of military personnel and
veterans in certain situations, to
correctional facilities in certain
situations, to government programs relating
to eligibility and enrollment, and for
national security reasons, such as protection
of the President.
- Uses and Disclosures Requiring That You
Have an Opportunity to Object: In the
following situations, we may disclose your PHI
if we inform you about the disclosure in advance
and you do not object. However, if there is an
emergency situation and you cannot be given your
opportunity to object, disclosure may be made if
it is consistent with any prior expressed wishes
and disclosure is determined to be in your best
interests. You must be informed and given an
opportunity to object to further disclosure as
soon as you are able to do so.
- Client Directories: Your name,
location, general condition, and religious
affiliation may be put into our client
directory for use by clergy and callers or
visitors who ask for you by name.
- To families, friends, or others
involved in your care: We may share with
these people information directly related to
your family's, friend's or other person's
involvement in your care, or payment for your
care. We may also share PHI with these people
to notify them about your location, general
condition, or death.
IV. Your Rights Regarding Your Protected
Health Information. You have the following
rights relating to your protected health
information:
- To request restrictions on uses/disclosures:
You have the right to ask that we limit how we
use or disclose your PHI. We will consider your
request, but are not legally bound to agree to
the restriction. To the extent that we do agree
to any restrictions on our use/disclosure of
your PHI, we will put the agreement in writing
and abide by it except in emergency situations.
We cannot agree to limit uses/disclosures that
are required by law. To request a restriction,
please contact our Medical Records
Department.
- To choose how we contact you: You have the
right to ask that we send you information at an
alternative address or by an alternative means.
We must agree to your request as long as it is
reasonably easy for us to do so. To request such
a change, please contact our Medical Records
Department.
- To inspect and copy your PHI: Unless your
access is restricted for clear and documented
treatment reasons, or under applicable laws and
regulations, you have a right to see your
protected health information if you put your
request in writing. We will respond to your
request within 30 days. If we deny your access,
we will give written reasons for the denial and
explain any right to have the denial reviewed.
If you want copies of your PHI, a charge for
copying may be imposed, but may be waived,
depending on your circumstances. You have a
right to choose what portions of your
information you want copied and to have prior
information on the cost of copying. In order to
request access to your PHI, please contact our
Medical Records Department.
- To request amendment of your PHI: If you
believe that there is a mistake or missing
information in our record of your PHI, you may
request, in writing, that we correct or add to
the record. We will respond within 60 days of
receiving your request. We may deny the request
if we determine that the PHI is: (i) correct and
complete; (ii) not created by us and/or not part
of our records, or; (iii) not permitted to be
disclosed. Any denial will state the reasons for
denial and explain your rights to have the
request and denial, along with any statement in
response that you provide, appended to your PHI.
If we approve the request for amendment, we will
change the PHI and so inform you, and tell
others that need to know about the change in the
PHI. To request an amendment, please contact our
Medical Records Department for an amendment
request form, and return a competed form to that
department.
- To find out what disclosures have been made:
You have a right to get a list of when, to whom,
for what purpose, and what content of your PHI
has been released other than instances of
disclosure for which you provided authorization
or for which no authorization was needed (i.e.
for treatment, payment, operations, to you, your
family, or the facility directory). The list
also will not include any disclosures made for
national security purposes, to law enforcement
officials or correctional facilities, or before
April 14, 2003. We will respond to your written
request for such a list within 60 days of
receiving it. Your request can relate to
disclosures going as far back as six years.
There will be no charge for up to one such list
each year. There may be a charge for more
frequent requests. To request a listing of
disclosures, please contact our Medical Records
Department for a disclosure request form, and
return the completed form to that
department.
- To receive this notice: You have a right to
receive a paper copy of this Notice and/or an
electronic copy by e-mail upon request. If you
request an electronic copy via e-mail, you must
sign a consent form to allow us to communicate
with you in that manner.
V. How to Make a Complaint About a Violation
of our Privacy Practices:
If you think we may have violated your privacy
rights, or you disagree with a decision we made
about access to your PHI, you may file a complaint
with the person listed in Section VI below. You
also may file a written complaint with the Office
for Civil Rights of the Federal Department of
Health and Human Services. We will take no
retaliatory action against you if you make such
complaints.
VI. Contact Person for Information, or to
Submit a Complaint:
If you have questions about this Notice or any
complaints about our privacy practices, please
contact: Thomas Dugan or Joyce O'Neill, 151 Woodbine
Road, Downingtown PA 19335 or by calling
610-269-2600.
VII. Effective Date: This Notice is effective
on April 14, 2003.

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