Notice of Privacy Practices
|
Effective date of notice: April 7, 2003 |
| John M. Tsue, O.D. | (808) 329-5253 |
| 75-5722 Kuakini Hwy., Ste 212 | (808)326-4765 |
| Kailua-Kona, HI 96740 | eyecare@eyecareofkona.com |
This notice describes
how medical information about you may be used and disclosed, and how you can
obtain access to this information. Please review it carefully.
General Rule
We respect our legal obligation to keep health information, that identifies you, private.
The law obligates us to give you notice of our privacy practices.
Generally, we can only use your health information
in our office or disclose it outside of our office, without your
written permission, for purposes of treatment, payment or healthcare
operations. In most other situations, we will not use or disclose
your health information unless you sign a written authorization form.
In some limited situations, the law allows or requires us to disclose
your health information without written authorization.
Uses or Disclosures of Health Information
Examples of how we use information for treatment purposes:
- When we set up an appointment for you.
- When our technician or doctor tests your eyes.
- When the doctor prescribes glasses or contact lenses.
- When the doctor prescribes medication.
- When the doctor performs a procedure on your eyes.
- When our staff helps you select and order glasses or contact lenses.
- When we show you low vision aids.
We may disclose your health information outside of
our office for treatment purposes, for example:
- If we refer you to
another doctor or clinic for eye care or low vision aids or
services.
- If we send a
prescription for glasses or contacts to another professional to be
filled.
- When we provide a
prescription for medication to a pharmacist.
- When we phone to let you
know that your glasses or contact lenses are ready to be picked up.
Sometimes we may ask for copies of your health
information from another professional that you may have seen before.
We may use your
health information within our office or disclose your health
information outside of our office for payment purposes. Some
examples are:
- When our staff asks you about health or vision care plans that you may belong to, or about other sources of payment for our services.
- When we prepare bills to send to you or your health or vision care plan.
- When we process payment by credit card and when we try to collect unpaid amounts due.
- When bills or claims for payment are mailed, faxed, or sent by computer to you or your health or vision plan.
- When we occasionally have to ask a collection agency or attorney to help us with unpaid amounts due.
We use and disclose your health information for
healthcare operations in a number of ways. Health care
operations means those administrative and managerial functions that
we have to do in order to run our office. We may use or disclose your
health information, for example, for financial or billing audits, for
internal quality assurance, for personnel decisions, to enable our
doctors to participate in managed care plans, for the defense of
legal matters, to develop business plans, and for outside storage of
our records.
Appointment Reminders
We may call to remind you of
scheduled appointments. We may also call to notify you of other
treatments or services available at our office that might help you.
Uses & Disclosures without an Authorization
In
some limited situations, the law allows or requires us to use or
disclose your health information without your permission. Not all of
these situations will apply to us; some may never happen at our
office at all. Such uses or disclosures are:
- A state or federal law
that mandates certain health information be reported for a specific
purpose.
- Public health purposes,
such as contagious disease reporting, investigation or surveillance;
and notices to and from the Food and Drug Administration regarding
drugs or medical devices.
- Disclosures to
governmental authorities about victims of suspected abuse, neglect
or domestic violence.
- Uses and disclosures for
health oversight activities, such as for the licensing of doctors,
audits by Medicare or Medicaid, or investigation of possible
violations of healthcare laws.
- Disclosures for judicial
and administrative proceedings, such as in response to subpoenas or
orders of courts or administrative agencies.
- Disclosures for law
enforcement purposes, such as to provide information about someone
who is or is suspected to be a victim of a crime; to provide
information about a crime at our office; or to report a crime that
happened somewhere else.
- Disclosure to a medical
examiner to identify a dead person or to determine the cause of
death; or to funeral directors to aid in burial; or to organizations
that handle organ or tissue donations.
- Uses or disclosures for
health related research.
- Uses and disclosures to
prevent a serious threat to health or safety.
- Uses or disclosures for
specialized government functions, such as for the protection of the
president or high ranking government officials; for lawful national
intelligence activities; for military purposes; or for the
evaluation and health of members of the foreign service.
- Disclosures relating to
workers’ compensation programs.
- Disclosures to business
associates who perform healthcare operations for us and who agree to
keep your health information private.
Other
Disclosures
We will not make
any other uses or disclosures of your health information unless you
sign a written authorization form. You do not have to sign
such a form. If you do sign one, you may revoke it at any time unless
we have already acted in reliance upon it.
Your Rights Regarding Your Health Information
The law gives you many rights regarding your health information.
- You can ask
us to restrict our uses and disclosures for purposes of treatment
(except emergency treatment), payment or healthcare operations. We
do not have to agree to do this, but if we agree, we must honor the
restrictions that you want. To ask for a restriction, send a written
request to John M. Tsue, O.D. at the address, fax or e-mail
shown at the beginning of this notice.
- You can ask
us to communicate with you in a confidential way, such as by phoning
you at work rather than at home, by mailing health information to a
different address, or by using e-mail to your personal email
address. We will accommodate these requests if they are reasonable,
and if you pay us for any extra cost. If you want to ask for
confidential communications, send a written request to John M.
Tsue, O.D. at the address, fax or e-mail shown at the beginning
of this notice.
- You can ask
to see or to get photocopies of your health information. By law,
there are a few limited situations in which we can refuse to permit
access or copying. Primarily, however, you will be able to review or
have a copy of your health information within 30 days of asking us.
You may have to pay for photocopies in advance. If we deny your
request, we will send you a written explanation, and instructions
about how to get an impartial review of our denial if one is legally
required. By law, we can have one 30-day extension of the time for
us to give you access or photocopies if we sent you a written notice
of the extension. If you want to review or get photocopies of your
health information, send a written request to John M. Tsue, O.D.
at the address, fax or e-mail shown at the beginning of this notice.
- You can ask
us to amend your health information if you think that it is
incorrect or incomplete. If we agree, we will amend the information
within 60 days from when you ask us. We will send the corrected
information to persons who we know got the wrong information, and
others that you specify. If we do not agree, you can write a
statement of your position, and we will include it with your health
information along with any rebuttal statement that we may write.
Once your statement of position and/or rebuttal is included in your
health information, we will send it along whenever we make a
permitted disclosure of your health information. By law, we can have
one 30-day extension of time to consider a request for amendment if
we notify you in writing of the extension. If you want to ask us to
amend your health information, send a written request, including
your reasons for the amendment, to John M. Tsue, O.D. at the
address, fax or e-mail shown at the beginning of this notice.
- You can get
a list of the disclosures that we have made of your health
information within the past six years (or a shorter period if you
want), except disclosures for purposes of treatment, payment or
health care operations, disclosures made in accordance with an
authorization signed by you, and some other limited disclosures. You
are entitled to one such list per year without charge. If you want
more frequent lists, you will have to pay for them in advance. We
will usually respond to your request within 60 days of receiving it,
but by law we can have one 30-day extension of time if we notify you
of the extension in writing. If you want a list, send a written
request to John M. Tsue, O.D. at the address, fax or e-mail
shown at the beginning of this notice.
Our Notice of Privacy Practices
By law, we must
abide by the terms of this Notice of Privacy Practices until we
choose to change it. We reserve the right to change this notice at
any time in compliance with and as allowed by law. If we change this
notice, the new privacy practices will apply to your health
information that we already have, as well as to such information that
we may generate in the future. If we change our Notice of Privacy
Practices, we will post the new notice in our office, have copies
available in our office and post it on our website.
Complaints
If you think
that we have not properly respected the privacy of your health
information, you are free to complain to us or to the U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services, Office for Civil Rights. We will not
retaliate against you if you make a complaint. If you want to
complain to us, send a written complaint to John M. Tsue, O.D.
at the address, fax or e-mail shown at the beginning of this notice.
If you prefer, you can discuss your complaint in person or by phone.
For More Information
If you want more
information about our privacy practices, call or visit John M.
Tsue, O.D. at the address or phone number shown at the beginning
of this notice.
|