If a patient was in the emergency department in a neighboring hospital and you received a call from them requesting that you fax copies of a patient's health records, how would you handle this situation?
Ans) Yes. The Privacy Rule allows covered health care providers to share protected health information for treatment purposes without patient authorization, as long as they use reasonable safeguards when doing so. These treatment communications may occur orally or in writing, by phone, fax, e-mail, or otherwise.
For example:
• A laboratory may fax, or communicate over the phone, a
patient’s medical test results to a physician.
• A physician may mail or fax a copy of a patient’s medical record
to a specialist who intends to treat the patient.
• A hospital may fax a patient’s health care instructions to a
nursing home to which the patient is to be transferred.
• A doctor may discuss a patient’s condition over the phone with an
emergency room physician who is providing the patient with
emergency care.
• A doctor may orally discuss a patient’s treatment regimen with a
nurse who will be involved in the patient’s care.
• A physician may consult with another physician by e-mail about a
patient’s condition.
• A hospital may share an organ donor’s medical information with
another hospital treating the organ recipient.
- The Privacy Rule requires that covered health care providers apply reasonable safeguards when making these communications to protect the information from inappropriate use or disclosure. These safeguards may vary depending on the mode of communication used. For example, when faxing protected health information to a telephone number that is not regularly used, a reasonable safeguard may involve a provider first confirming the fax number with the intended recipient. Similarly, a covered entity may pre-program frequently used numbers directly into the fax machine to avoid misdirecting the information. When discussing patient health information orally with another provider in proximity of others, a doctor may be able to reasonably safeguard the information by lowering his or her voice.
If a patient was in the emergency department in a neighboring hospital and you received a...
A hospital can be vicariously liable for the negligent acts of an independent contracted emergency department physicians if a patient A. is treated a physician who the patient believes is an employee of the hospital B. is transported to the hospital emergency department by ambulance C. seeks emergency treatment from the hospital D. is treated by a physician not of the patient's choosin
The mother of a 19 year old patient presents to the Health Information Department and demands you release copies of her daughter's health records. The mother indicates that her daughter is on her insurance plan and that she is responsible for and pays for her daughter's bills. How do you handle this situation?
1. You are a nurse admitting a patient to the hospital from the emergency department (ED) with shortness of breath and recent weight loss. After receiving a report from the ED nurse, you ready the patient's room according to unit specifications and collect the necessary equipment and forms. When the patient arrives, she is using oxygen via a nasal cannula and seems to be comfortable. As you begin your admission activities and paperwork, you note that her shortness of breath...
"Emergency Situations" Please respond to the following: Suppose you work in a hospital that just received twelve patients from a disaster event in your community. Your hospital is able to treat and provide necessary surgical services to those that require surgery. However, five patients are refusing care and requesting to be transferred to another hospital for the same services. Suggest the course of action that the hospital should take to meet the standards of the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active...
Musculo-Skeletal Disorders (MSD). In the Emergency Department you have received a patient with a suspected leg fracture. What are the Signs & Symptoms of a fracture that you would look for to confirm such a diagnosis?
Musculo-Skeletal Disorders (MSD). In the Emergency Department you have received a patient with a suspected leg fracture. What are the Signs & Symptoms of a fracture that you would look for to confirm such a diagnosis?
If a patient requests copies of their health record, the facility must provide the copies within 30 days of the request. If the records are stored off-site and you are not able to meet the 30-day time frame, how would you handle the situation?
analyze a scenario using the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act (EMTALA). You are the administrator on call for Hospital A and are responsible for accepting and rejecting patients. You receive a call at 2:00 a.m. from Health Hospital B regarding a patient with a severed ear. The ED physician is calling to arrange an EMTALA-qualified transfer from his hospital to yours, but the ENT physician on call at your hospital is refusing to accept the transfer, stating that...
Question 5 The waiting time in the emergency department in a large hospital is a concern for the outdoor patients. Based on the historical records of the hospital, it is found that the mean and standard deviation of waiting time of patients in the emergency department are 40 minutes and 6 minutes respectively. Assume that the distribution of waiting time follows a normal model. For the waiting time of a random sample of 25 patients from the population of patients...
Question 4. Answer both parts A patient arrives at the emergency department of the local hospital with a fever, rash and muscle pains. A full medical examination is undertaken (including microbial examination of a blood sample from the patient). Doctors determine that the patient is suffering from a blood infection. On taking a full medical history, it was discovered that the patient has an underlying medical conditions that requires daily injections of medicine and hypothesise that contamination of this medicine...