Slide Show | October 2008
What You Need to Know About Health Privacy
Slide Show
What You Need to Know About Health Privacy
Your privacy is protected.
But five years after the law took effect, gaps and unintended consequences have cropped up. Sometimes called the Huge Increase in Paperwork and Aggravation Act, HIPAA has been blamed-not always justifiably-for everything from stymied medical research to the killings at Virginia Tech last year. Your privacy is protected.
Slide Show
What You Need to Know About Health Privacy
And also overprotected.
Parents have been unable to find out whether a child has been hospitalized, and adult children have been denied details on the condition of an elderly parent. And also overprotected.
Slide Show
What You Need to Know About Health Privacy
Few people understand the law.
You don't have to sign a form at the doctor's office to receive treatment. HIPAA requires only that health-care providers make an effort to get you to read the form and understand your rights. But the disclosures are written in language "way beyond the average reading level of people in this country," says McGraw. Few people understand the law.
Slide Show
What You Need to Know About Health Privacy
And now the loopholes.
But despite thousands of complaints and well-documented abuses by health-care providers, the feds have never imposed a monetary penalty. "That sends a message to the industry that they don't have to work very hard to comply with the law because they won't ever have to pay,S says McGraw. And now the loopholes.
Slide Show
What You Need to Know About Health Privacy
Your personal record could still be at risk.
But privacy advocates worry that when companies outside the health system, such as Microsoft and Google, store your information, it could leak to marketers or data bro-kers or be more easily subpoenaed than records protected by HIPAA. Your personal record could still be at risk.






