The proposal is to be published in the Federal Register next week, with 30 days for 
public comment. The government will consider the comments and then issue a final rule, 
with the force of law.

WE ALL NEED TO PREPARE TO SUBMIT COMMENTS IN FAVOR OF THIS.

-----Original Message-----
From: St. Clair, James [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Friday, March 22, 2002 8:05 AM
To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: Privacy rule on the ropes


Bush Acts to Drop Core Privacy Rule on Medical Data
By ROBERT PEAR
New York Times
March 21, 2002
WASHINGTON, March 21 - The Bush administration today proposed dropping a
requirement at the heart of federal rules that protect the privacy of
medical records. It said doctors and hospitals should not have to obtain
consent from patients before using or disclosing medical information for the
purpose of treatment or reimbursement.

The proposal, favored by the health care industry, was announced by Tommy G.
Thompson, the secretary of health and human services, who said the process
of obtaining consent could have "serious unintended consequences" and could
impair access to quality health care.

The sweeping privacy rules were issued by President Bill Clinton in December
2000. When Mr. Bush allowed them to take effect last April, consumer
advocates cheered, while much of the health care industry expressed dismay.

Today's proposal would repeal a provision widely viewed as the core of the
Clinton rules: a requirement that doctors, hospitals and other health care
providers obtain written consent from patients before using or disclosing
medical information for treatment, the payment of claims or any of a long
list of "health care operations," like setting insurance premiums and
measuring the competence of doctors.

The proposal is to be published in the Federal Register next week, with 30
days for public comment. The government will consider the comments and then
issue a final rule, with the force of law.

Secretary Thompson said he wanted to remove the consent requirements because
he believed they could delay care.

Pharmacists and hospitals had expressed the same concern. Drugstores said
they could not fill prescriptions phoned in by a doctor for pick-up by a
patient's relative or neighbor. Hospitals said they could not schedule
medical procedures until the patient had read a privacy notice and signed a
consent form.

Hospitals and insurance companies praised today's proposal as a victory for
common sense, but consumer advocates and Democratic members of Congress
denounced it as a threat to privacy.

"In general, this is great for the health care industry," said Elisabeth
Belmont, corporate counsel for Maine Health, which operates seven hospitals,
a nursing home and a home health agency in Maine. Mary R. Grealy, president
of the Health Care Leadership Council, which represents drug makers,
drugstores, insurers and hospitals, said: "The new proposal strikes an
appropriate balance. It's a workable compromise."

But Janlori Goldman, coordinator of the Consumer Coalition for Health
Privacy, an alliance of more than 100 groups favoring patients' rights, said
the administration was proposing "a destructive change."

Representative Edward J. Markey, Democrat of Massachusetts, said: "By
stripping the consent requirement from the health privacy rule, the Bush
administration strips patients of the fundamental right to give their
consent before their health information is used or disclosed. The
administration's proposal throws the baby away with the bath water." 

Senator Edward M. Kennedy, Democrat of Massachusetts, said he was "very
concerned" because he believed that "an individual should have to give
permission before medical information is disclosed."

The Bush administration denied that it was eviscerating privacy protections.
"The president believes strongly in the need for federal protections to
ensure patient privacy, and the changes we are proposing today will allow us
to deliver strong protections for personal medical information while
improving access to care," Mr. Thompson said. 

Under the rules, doctors and other health care providers would still have to
notify patients of their rights and the providers' disclosure policies.
Patients would be asked to acknowledge in writing that they had received
such notice, but could receive care without the acknowledgment. 

Ms. Goldman, director of the Health Privacy Project at Georgetown
University, said: "It's absurd to suggest that a notice serves the same
purpose as consent. Signing the consent makes it more likely that people
will understand their rights."

Some parts of the Clinton rules would survive the changes proposed by the
Bush administration. Patients would, for example, have a federal right to
inspect and copy their records and could propose corrections.

Congress could try to set privacy standards by law, overriding decisions by
the Bush administration. But that appears unlikely. Under a 1996 law,
Congress instructed the secretary of health and human services to issue
rules on medical privacy in the absence of action by Congress, and lawmakers
have never been able to agree on standards.

In its proposal today, the Bush administration tries to ensure that parents
have "appropriate access" to medical records of their children, including
information about mental health, abortion and treatment for drug and alcohol
abuse. The Clinton rules "may have unintentionally limited parents' access
to their child's medical records," the Bush administration said. The
proposal makes clear that state law governs disclosures to parents.

The Bush proposal would also relax some consent requirements that medical
researchers saw as particularly onerous.

The rules, the first comprehensive federal standards for medical privacy,
affect virtually every doctor, patient, hospital, pharmacy and health plan
in the United States.

Health care providers and insurers must comply by April 14, 2003. Anyone who
violates the rules after that date will be subject to civil and criminal
penalties, including a $250,000 fine and 10 years in prison for the most
serious violations.

When Mr. Clinton issued the rules in December 2000, he described them as
"the most sweeping privacy protections ever written." Mr. Bush took
political credit for accepting those rules last April. White House officials
said Mr. Bush would back a wide range of privacy protections for consumers,
even if he had to defy his usual business allies.

The White House wanted to avoid the political embarrassment Mr. Bush
suffered when he altered Clinton policies on arsenic levels in drinking
water, global warming, ergonomic rules and the contamination of school lunch
meat with salmonella. But after studying the medical privacy rules and
listening to the concerns of companies in the health care industry, the
administration concluded that major provisions of the Clinton rules were
unworkable.

copyright 2002 New York Times
 

**********************************************************************
To be removed from this list, go to: http://snip.wedi.org/unsubscribe.cfm?list=privacy
and enter your email address.


**********************************************************************
To be removed from this list, go to: http://snip.wedi.org/unsubscribe.cfm?list=privacy
and enter your email address.

Reply via email to