Time out on screen savers

2003-02-26 Thread Cheryl Johnston

We are trying to set a screen saver timeout for high visibility workstations of 30 seconds or less. The Microsoft minimum is 1 minute. We can hack the registry to reflect a timeout of 30 seconds, but the reality is that the screen saver will launch at 60 seconds. Has anyone been able to successfully implement a screen saver timeout of less than 60 seconds?MSN 8 helps ELIMINATE E-MAIL VIRUSES. Get 2 months FREE*.
---
The WEDI SNIP listserv to which you are subscribed is not moderated. The discussions on this listserv therefore represent the views of the individual participants, and do not necessarily represent the views of the WEDI Board of Directors nor WEDI SNIP. If you wish to receive an official opinion, post your question to the WEDI SNIP Issues Database at http://snip.wedi.org/tracking/.   These listservs should not be used for commercial marketing purposes or discussion of specific vendor products and services.  They also are not intended to be used as a forum for personal disagreements or unprofessional communication at any time.

You are currently subscribed to wedi-privacy as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To unsubscribe from this list, go to the Subscribe/Unsubscribe form at http://subscribe.wedi.org or send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
If you need to unsubscribe but your current email address is not the same as the address subscribed to the list, please use the Subscribe/Unsubscribe form at http://subscribe.wedi.org




Re: medical vendors as Business Associates

2003-02-26 Thread Doug Webb



Jill,
I agree with Dan.

The critical question is do you do anything on behalf of a 
Covered Entity that involves PHI? If this answer is "No", you do not need 
a BAA.

Providing devices to non-patients isolates you from 
PHI.

Providing devices to patients is acting on behalf of yourself 
(I assume you make a profit on the deal, or you wouldn't be in business), not a 
service to the Covered Entity. If you also bill insurance carriers 
electronically, you may be a Covered Entity (providing Treatment).

As Dan said, it would be extremely rare that a vendor of this 
type would be in a Business Associate relationship with a Covered 
Entity.

If it operates in some other role in addition to being a DME 
vendor, that role must be considered independantly.
.
The opinions expressed here are my own and not necessarily the opinion of 
LCMH.

Douglas M. WebbComputer System EngineerLittle Company of Mary 
Hospital  Health Care Centers[EMAIL PROTECTED]

"This electronic message may contain information that is confidential 
and/or legally privileged. It is intended only for the use of the individual(s) 
and entity(s) named as recipients in the message. If you are not an 
intended recipient of the message, please notify the sender immediately, 
delete the material from any computer, do not deliver, distribute, or copy this 
message, and do not disclose its contents or take action in reliance on the 
information it contains. Thank you."



  - Original Message - 
  From: 
  Dan Kelsey 
  
  To: WEDI SNIP Privacy Workgroup List 
  
  Sent: Wednesday, February 26, 2003 08:32 
  AM
  Subject: RE: medical vendors as Business 
  Associates
  
  I think your 
  decision would have to be very fact based. For example, if a wheelchair 
  company sells 50 wheelchairs to a hospital, then they would not be a BA of the 
  hospital. However, if the hospital rehab unit orders a custom fit 
  wheelchair that involves disclosure of the patient's limitations, physical 
  build, etc., then chances are a BA relationship does not exist either. I 
  say "chances are" because treatment by a health care provider is exempt from 
  the BA definition and a BAA is not required. 
  
  The key issue 
  is if the medical vendor meets the definition of a health care provider - 
  there is a mention in HIPAA for the Federal definition, and it is fairly all 
  encompassing. Generally speaking, I do not think the majority of these 
  vendors would be business associates.
  
  Hope this 
  helps,
  
  Dan Kelsey Practice Advisor Indiana State 
  Medical Association 800-257-4762 
  (317) 261-2060 (317) 261-2076 - fax 
  
-Original Message-From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]Sent: Wednesday, February 26, 2003 7:42 
AMTo: WEDI SNIP Privacy Workgroup ListSubject: medical 
vendors as Business AssociatesAre 
medical vendors that supply products like prosthesis, wheelchairs, etc., 
considered BA? I have been researching this and can't seem to come up with 
clear answer...Thanks in advanceJill Rubin, 
Esq.(617)388-2404[EMAIL PROTECTED] ---The WEDI SNIP 
listserv to which you are subscribed is not moderated. The discussions on 
this listserv therefore represent the views of the individual participants, 
and do not necessarily represent the views of the WEDI Board of Directors 
nor WEDI SNIP. If you wish to receive an official opinion, post your 
question to the WEDI SNIP Issues Database at http://snip.wedi.org/tracking/. 
These listservs should not be used for commercial marketing purposes or 
discussion of specific vendor products and services. They also are not 
intended to be used as a forum for personal disagreements or unprofessional 
communication at any time.You are currently subscribed to 
wedi-privacy as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]To unsubscribe from this list, go to 
the Subscribe/Unsubscribe form at http://subscribe.wedi.org or send a blank 
email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]If you need to 
unsubscribe but your current email address is not the same as the address 
subscribed to the list, please use the Subscribe/Unsubscribe form at 
http://subscribe.wedi.org ---The WEDI SNIP listserv to 
  which you are subscribed is not moderated. The discussions on this listserv 
  therefore represent the views of the individual participants, and do not 
  necessarily represent the views of the WEDI Board of Directors nor WEDI SNIP. 
  If you wish to receive an official opinion, post your question to the WEDI 
  SNIP Issues Database at http://snip.wedi.org/tracking/. These listservs should 
  not be used for commercial marketing purposes or discussion of specific vendor 
  products and services. They also are not intended to be used as a forum for 
  personal disagreements or unprofessional communication at any time.You 
  are currently subscribed to wedi-privacy as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]To unsubscribe 
  from this list, go to the Subscribe/Unsubscribe form at 
  

RE: Time out on screen savers

2003-02-26 Thread Vishnevsky, Jacob



well, 
there are multiple way to achieve the desired results you are asking for, we 
have also had to customize screen saver to allow a different person to unlock 
the machine , for operational and security reasons, please call me , so I could 
provide you with more information

regards, 

Jacob VishnevskyStelex-TVGTwo Greenwood Square, 
Suite 3103331 Street 
RoadBensalem, PA 
19020phone: (215) 
352-1133 cell:(215) 421-8539fax: (215) 638-9333email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

  -Original Message-From: Cheryl Johnston 
  [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]Sent: Wednesday, February 26, 
  2003 7:48 AMTo: WEDI SNIP Privacy Workgroup ListSubject: 
  Time out on screen savers
  
  
  We are trying to set a screen saver timeout for high visibility 
  workstations of 30 seconds or less. The Microsoft minimum is 1 minute. We can 
  hack the registry to reflect a timeout of 30 seconds, but the reality is that 
  the screen saver will launch at 60 seconds. Has anyone been able to 
  successfully implement a screen saver timeout of less than 60 
  seconds?
  
  MSN 8 helps ELIMINATE E-MAIL 
  VIRUSES. Get 2 months FREE*. ---The WEDI SNIP listserv to which you 
  are subscribed is not moderated. The discussions on this listserv therefore 
  represent the views of the individual participants, and do not necessarily 
  represent the views of the WEDI Board of Directors nor WEDI SNIP. If you wish 
  to receive an official opinion, post your question to the WEDI SNIP Issues 
  Database at http://snip.wedi.org/tracking/. These listservs should not be used 
  for commercial marketing purposes or discussion of specific vendor products 
  and services. They also are not intended to be used as a forum for personal 
  disagreements or unprofessional communication at any time.You are 
  currently subscribed to wedi-privacy as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]To 
  unsubscribe from this list, go to the Subscribe/Unsubscribe form at 
  http://subscribe.wedi.org or send a blank email to 
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]If you need to unsubscribe but 
  your current email address is not the same as the address subscribed to the 
  list, please use the Subscribe/Unsubscribe form at http://subscribe.wedi.org 

---
The WEDI SNIP listserv to which you are subscribed is not moderated. The discussions on this listserv therefore represent the views of the individual participants, and do not necessarily represent the views of the WEDI Board of Directors nor WEDI SNIP. If you wish to receive an official opinion, post your question to the WEDI SNIP Issues Database at http://snip.wedi.org/tracking/.   These listservs should not be used for commercial marketing purposes or discussion of specific vendor products and services.  They also are not intended to be used as a forum for personal disagreements or unprofessional communication at any time.

You are currently subscribed to wedi-privacy as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To unsubscribe from this list, go to the Subscribe/Unsubscribe form at http://subscribe.wedi.org or send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
If you need to unsubscribe but your current email address is not the same as the address subscribed to the list, please use the Subscribe/Unsubscribe form at http://subscribe.wedi.org




Re: medical vendors as Business Associates

2003-02-26 Thread Doug Webb



Dawn,
This looks like a lot of "CYA" BAA contracts being sent 
unnecessarily. The logic seems to be send them to everybody, and see who 
signs them.

Don't forget that the CE is the one who is responsible to 
ensure that the proper BAAs are in place. Since a contract is signed by 
both sides, it doesn't matter who drafts the text. A BA who drafts the BAA 
text is trying to increase the likelyhood that their version is the one that is 
signed. Don't sign anything until your lawyer checks it out!

The opinions expressed here are my own and not necessarily the opinion of 
LCMH.

Douglas M. WebbComputer System EngineerLittle Company of Mary 
Hospital  Health Care Centers[EMAIL PROTECTED]

"This electronic message may contain information that is confidential 
and/or legally privileged. It is intended only for the use of the individual(s) 
and entity(s) named as recipients in the message. If you are not an 
intended recipient of the message, please notify the sender immediately, 
delete the material from any computer, do not deliver, distribute, or copy this 
message, and do not disclose its contents or take action in reliance on the 
information it contains. Thank you."



  - Original Message - 
  From: 
  Dawn 
  Lenox 
  To: Doug Webb 
  Sent: Wednesday, February 26, 2003 09:37 
  AM
  Subject: Re: medical vendors as Business 
  Associates
  
  I tried to explain this to 
  a vendor that sent us (CE) their BA (non-CE) as a favor to usThey said we 
  were being liberal in our interpretation and that they were being 
  "conservative"...they did not even request that we sign it...go 
  figure.
  
- Original Message - 
From: 
Doug Webb 
To: WEDI SNIP Privacy Workgroup 
List 
Sent: Wednesday, February 26, 2003 9:29 
AM
Subject: Re: medical vendors as 
Business Associates

Jill,
I agree with Dan.

The critical question is do you do anything on behalf of a 
Covered Entity that involves PHI? If this answer is "No", you do not 
need a BAA.

Providing devices to non-patients isolates you from 
PHI.

Providing devices to patients is acting on behalf of 
yourself (I assume you make a profit on the deal, or you wouldn't be in 
business), not a service to the Covered Entity. If you also bill 
insurance carriers electronically, you may be a Covered Entity (providing 
Treatment).

As Dan said, it would be extremely rare that a vendor of 
this type would be in a Business Associate relationship with a Covered 
Entity.

If it operates in some other role in addition to being a 
DME vendor, that role must be considered independantly.
.
The opinions expressed here are my own and not necessarily the opinion 
of LCMH.

Douglas M. WebbComputer System EngineerLittle Company of Mary 
Hospital  Health Care Centers[EMAIL PROTECTED]

"This electronic message may contain information that is confidential 
and/or legally privileged. It is intended only for the use of the 
individual(s) and entity(s) named as recipients in the message. If you 
are not an intended recipient of the message, please notify the sender 
immediately, delete the material from any computer, do not deliver, 
distribute, or copy this message, and do not disclose its contents or take 
action in reliance on the information it contains. Thank you."



  - Original Message - 
  From: 
  Dan 
  Kelsey 
  To: WEDI SNIP Privacy Workgroup 
  List 
  Sent: Wednesday, February 26, 2003 
  08:32 AM
  Subject: RE: medical vendors as 
  Business Associates
  
  I think 
  your decision would have to be very fact based. For example, if a 
  wheelchair company sells 50 wheelchairs to a hospital, then they would not 
  be a BA of the hospital. However, if the hospital rehab unit orders 
  a custom fit wheelchair that involves disclosure of the patient's 
  limitations, physical build, etc., then chances are a BA relationship does 
  not exist either. I say "chances are" because treatment by a health 
  care provider is exempt from the BA definition and a BAA is not 
  required. 
  
  The key 
  issue is if the medical vendor meets the definition of a health care 
  provider - there is a mention in HIPAA for the Federal definition, and it 
  is fairly all encompassing. Generally speaking, I do not think the 
  majority of these vendors would be business 
associates.
  
  Hope this 
  helps,
  
  Dan Kelsey Practice Advisor Indiana State 
  Medical Association 800-257-4762 (317) 
  261-2060 (317) 261-2076 - fax 
  
  
-Original Message-From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]Sent: Wednesday, February 26, 2003 
7:42 AMTo: WEDI SNIP Privacy Workgroup 
ListSubject: medical 

RE: medical vendors as Business Associates

2003-02-26 Thread David Frenkel









Doug,

Does your facility do medical device
implants? If so, do you know what the official
position is of your facility on this? Thanks.



Regards,





David Frenkel

Business Development

GEFEG USA

Global Leader in
Ecommerce Tools

612-237-1966



-Original Message-
From: Doug Webb
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Wednesday, February 26, 2003 11:29 AM
To: WEDI SNIP Privacy Workgroup
List
Subject: Re: medical vendors as
Business Associates





Vicki,





I believe
that in this case the vendor would a Healthcare Providerparticipating in
Treatment.They would not be a BA. They would be a CE if they used
any of the standard electronic transactions.











The
opinions expressed here are my own and not necessarily the opinion of LCMH.











Douglas
M. Webb
Computer System Engineer
Little Company of Mary Hospital  Health Care Centers
[EMAIL PROTECTED]











This
electronic message may contain information that is confidential and/or legally
privileged. It is intended only for the use of the individual(s) and
entity(s) named as recipients in the message. If you are not an intended
recipient of the message, please notify the sender immediately, delete
the material from any computer, do not deliver, distribute, or copy this
message, and do not disclose its contents or take action in reliance on the
information it contains. Thank you.




















-
Original Message - 





From: Vicki
Schaff 





To: Doug Webb 





Sent: Wednesday, February
26, 2003 10:53 AM





Subject: Re:
medical vendors as Business Associates











Consider the vendor who supplies anew
medical deviceto ahealthcare facility (CE)and the
vendorprovides instruction to a surgeon (CE)during implantation of
the device. The vendor has access to PHI.One legal
opinion has stated that thevendor is a BA of the healthcare
facility. Your Comments. 







-
Original Message - 





From: Doug Webb






To: WEDI
SNIP Privacy Workgroup List 





Sent: Wednesday, February
26, 2003 9:29 AM





Subject: Re:
medical vendors as Business Associates











Jill,





I
agree with Dan.











The
critical question is do you do anything on behalf of a Covered Entity that
involves PHI? If this answer is No, you do not need a BAA.











Providing
devices to non-patients isolates you from PHI.











Providing
devices to patients is acting on behalf of yourself (I assume you make a profit
on the deal, or you wouldn't be in business), not a service to the Covered
Entity. If you also bill insurance carriers electronically, you may be a
Covered Entity (providing Treatment).











As Dan
said, it would be extremely rare that a vendor of this type would be in a
Business Associate relationship with a Covered Entity.











If it
operates in some other role in addition to being a DME vendor, that role must
be considered independantly.





.





The
opinions expressed here are my own and not necessarily the opinion of LCMH.











Douglas
M. Webb
Computer System Engineer
Little Company of Mary Hospital  Health Care Centers
[EMAIL PROTECTED]











This
electronic message may contain information that is confidential and/or legally
privileged. It is intended only for the use of the individual(s) and
entity(s) named as recipients in the message. If you are not an intended
recipient of the message, please notify the sender immediately, delete
the material from any computer, do not deliver, distribute, or copy this
message, and do not disclose its contents or take action in reliance on the
information it contains. Thank you.




















-
Original Message - 





From: Dan
Kelsey 





To: WEDI
SNIP Privacy Workgroup List 





Sent: Wednesday, February
26, 2003 08:32 AM





Subject: RE:
medical vendors as Business Associates











I think your decision
would have to be very fact based. For example, if a wheelchair company
sells 50 wheelchairs to a hospital, then they would not be a BA of the
hospital. However, if the hospital rehab unit orders a custom fit
wheelchair that involves disclosure of the patient's limitations, physical
build, etc., then chances are a BA relationship does not exist either. I
say chances are because treatment by a health care provider is exempt
from the BA definition and a BAA is not required. 











The key issue is if the
medical vendor meets the definition of a health care provider - there is a
mention in HIPAA for the Federal definition, and it is fairly all
encompassing. Generally speaking, I do not think the majority of these
vendors would be business associates.











Hope this helps,





Dan Kelsey 
Practice Advisor 
Indiana State Medical Association 
800-257-4762 
(317) 261-2060 
(317) 261-2076 - fax 





-Original
Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, February 26, 2003
7:42 AM
To: WEDI SNIP Privacy Workgroup
List
Subject: medical vendors as
Business Associates

Are 

RE: medical vendors as Business Associates

2003-02-26 Thread David Frenkel









Doug,

This discussion has appeared on other healthcare
listservs and there seems to be a strong leaning
towards having medical device manufacture reps be considered part of TPO. It
brings up an interesting liability issue as well as a patient consent issue for
reps being in the OR.



Regards,





David Frenkel

Business Development

GEFEG USA

Global Leader in
Ecommerce Tools

www.gefeg.com

612-237-1966



-Original Message-
From: Doug Webb [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Wednesday, February 26, 2003 2:53 PM
To: David Frenkel; WEDI SNIP
Privacy Workgroup List
Subject: Re: medical vendors as
Business Associates





David,





They do, but I'm not directly involved, so I don't
know the answer to your question.











Jim Hewitt did bring up an interesting point that
these vendors may also be hardware/software support people. In that role,
I would think that a BAA would be appropriate to state that they would protect
PHI they contact while maintaining the equipment.











I had been thinking just of their role as a supplier
of the equipment.





Whew! Covering all bases is tough!.











The opinions expressed here are my own and not
necessarily the opinion of LCMH.











Douglas M. Webb
Computer System Engineer
Little Company of Mary Hospital  Health Care Centers
[EMAIL PROTECTED]











This electronic message may contain information that
is confidential and/or legally privileged. It is intended only for the use of
the individual(s) and entity(s) named as recipients in the message. If
you are not an intended recipient of the message, please notify the sender
immediately, delete the material from any computer, do not deliver,
distribute, or copy this message, and do not disclose its contents or take
action in reliance on the information it contains. Thank you.




















- Original Message - 





From: David Frenkel 





To: WEDI
SNIP Privacy Workgroup List 





Sent: Wednesday, February 26, 2003 02:10 PM





Subject: RE: medical
vendors as Business Associates









Doug,

Does your facility do
medical device implants? If so, do you
know what the official position is of your facility on this? Thanks.



Regards,





David
Frenkel

Business
Development

GEFEG USA

Global
Leader in Ecommerce Tools

612-237-1966



-Original Message-
From: Doug Webb
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Wednesday, February 26, 2003 11:29 AM
To: WEDI SNIP Privacy Workgroup
List
Subject: Re: medical vendors as
Business Associates





Vicki,





I believe
that in this case the vendor would a Healthcare Providerparticipating in
Treatment.They would not be a BA. They would be a CE if they used
any of the standard electronic transactions.











The
opinions expressed here are my own and not necessarily the opinion of LCMH.











Douglas
M. Webb
Computer System Engineer
Little Company of Mary Hospital  Health Care Centers
[EMAIL PROTECTED]











This
electronic message may contain information that is confidential and/or legally privileged.
It is intended only for the use of the individual(s) and entity(s) named
as recipients in the message. If you are not an intended recipient of the
message, please notify the sender immediately, delete the material from
any computer, do not deliver, distribute, or copy this message, and do not
disclose its contents or take action in reliance on the information it
contains. Thank you.




















-
Original Message - 





From: Vicki
Schaff 





To: Doug Webb 





Sent: Wednesday, February
 26, 2003 10:53 AM





Subject: Re:
medical vendors as Business Associates











Consider the vendor who supplies anew
medical deviceto ahealthcare facility (CE)and the
vendorprovides instruction to a surgeon (CE)during implantation of
the device. The vendor has access to PHI.One
legal opinion has stated that thevendor is a BA of the healthcare facility.
Your Comments. 







-
Original Message - 





From: Doug Webb






To: WEDI
SNIP Privacy Workgroup List 





Sent: Wednesday, February
 26, 2003 9:29 AM





Subject: Re:
medical vendors as Business Associates











Jill,





I
agree with Dan.











The
critical question is do you do anything on behalf of a Covered Entity that
involves PHI? If this answer is No, you do not need a BAA.











Providing
devices to non-patients isolates you from PHI.











Providing
devices to patients is acting on behalf of yourself (I assume you make a profit
on the deal, or you wouldn't be in business), not a service to the Covered
Entity. If you also bill insurance carriers electronically, you may be a
Covered Entity (providing Treatment).











As Dan
said, it would be extremely rare that a vendor of this type would be in a
Business Associate relationship with a Covered Entity.











If it
operates in some other role in addition to being a DME vendor, that role must
be considered independantly.





.





The
opinions 

Re: medical vendors as Business Associates

2003-02-26 Thread Doug Webb



Craig,
That would be my 
understanding.

The opinions expressed here are my own and not necessarily the opinion of 
LCMH.

Douglas M. WebbComputer System EngineerLittle Company of Mary 
Hospital  Health Care Centers[EMAIL PROTECTED]

"This electronic message may contain information that is confidential 
and/or legally privileged. It is intended only for the use of the individual(s) 
and entity(s) named as recipients in the message. If you are not an 
intended recipient of the message, please notify the sender immediately, 
delete the material from any computer, do not deliver, distribute, or copy this 
message, and do not disclose its contents or take action in reliance on the 
information it contains. Thank you."



  - Original Message - 
  From: 
  Craig 
  Moen 
  To: 'Doug Webb' 
  Sent: Wednesday, February 26, 2003 03:28 
  PM
  Subject: RE: medical vendors as Business 
  Associates
  
  Doug-
  
  I want to make sure I am 
  understanding. 
  We are a home health agency 
  that provides therapy services. Our therapists interact with DME 
  providers, andorthotists and obviously share PHI. Since these are 
  outside services not provided by us, the DME providers, and orthotist 
  independently bill the appropriate insurance company. They would then 
  also be CE's and then we would be able to share info with them without a BAA 
  because information can be shared between CE's as a part of 
  treatment. 
  Correct?
  
  Thanks for your 
  input
  
  Craig 
Moen
  Director of 
  Rehabilitation
  THERAPY 
  2000
  Dallas, 
TX
---
The WEDI SNIP listserv to which you are subscribed is not moderated. The discussions on this listserv therefore represent the views of the individual participants, and do not necessarily represent the views of the WEDI Board of Directors nor WEDI SNIP. If you wish to receive an official opinion, post your question to the WEDI SNIP Issues Database at http://snip.wedi.org/tracking/.   These listservs should not be used for commercial marketing purposes or discussion of specific vendor products and services.  They also are not intended to be used as a forum for personal disagreements or unprofessional communication at any time.

You are currently subscribed to wedi-privacy as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To unsubscribe from this list, go to the Subscribe/Unsubscribe form at http://subscribe.wedi.org or send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
If you need to unsubscribe but your current email address is not the same as the address subscribed to the list, please use the Subscribe/Unsubscribe form at http://subscribe.wedi.org




RE: medical vendors as Business Associates

2003-02-26 Thread Rachel Foerster



It's more likelythis activity/role falls under a 
DME provider activity and thus may make this function/role a provider type. If 
they then seek reimbursement from a payer/health plan, this constitutes acting 
as a provider, doesn't it?

I'm aware of at least one major orthopaedic mfgr that 
has already determined its activity in directly providing to the patient their 
DME classified products and for which they then submit a claim for reimbursement 
makes this activity/role a covered entity.



Rachel 
Foerster CEO  
PresidentRachel 
Foerster  Associates, Ltd. Professionals in Health 
Care EDI, Privacy  Security39432 North Avenue 
Beach Park, IL 60099 Voice: 
847-872-8070 Fax: 847-872-6860 eMail: 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
http://www.rfa-edi.com 
##
This 
transmission may be confidential or protected from disclosure and is only for 
review and use by the intended recipient. 
Access by anyone else is unauthorized. Any unauthorized reader is hereby 
notified that any review, use, dissemination, disclosure or copying of this 
information, or any act or omission taken in reliance on it, is 
prohibited 
and may be unlawful. If you 
received this transmission in error, please notify the sender immediately. Thank 
you

  -Original Message-From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]Sent: Wednesday, February 26, 2003 6:42 
  AMTo: WEDI SNIP Privacy Workgroup ListSubject: medical 
  vendors as Business AssociatesAre 
  medical vendors that supply products like prosthesis, wheelchairs, etc., 
  considered BA? I have been researching this and can't seem to come up with 
  clear answer...Thanks in advanceJill Rubin, 
  Esq.(617)388-2404[EMAIL PROTECTED] ---The WEDI SNIP 
  listserv to which you are subscribed is not moderated. The discussions on this 
  listserv therefore represent the views of the individual participants, and do 
  not necessarily represent the views of the WEDI Board of Directors nor WEDI 
  SNIP. If you wish to receive an official opinion, post your question to the 
  WEDI SNIP Issues Database at http://snip.wedi.org/tracking/. These listservs 
  should not be used for commercial marketing purposes or discussion of specific 
  vendor products and services. They also are not intended to be used as a forum 
  for personal disagreements or unprofessional communication at any 
  time.You are currently subscribed to wedi-privacy as: 
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]To unsubscribe from this list, go to the 
  Subscribe/Unsubscribe form at http://subscribe.wedi.org or send a blank email 
  to [EMAIL PROTECTED]If you need to unsubscribe 
  but your current email address is not the same as the address subscribed to 
  the list, please use the Subscribe/Unsubscribe form at 
  http://subscribe.wedi.org 
---
The WEDI SNIP listserv to which you are subscribed is not moderated. The discussions on this listserv therefore represent the views of the individual participants, and do not necessarily represent the views of the WEDI Board of Directors nor WEDI SNIP. If you wish to receive an official opinion, post your question to the WEDI SNIP Issues Database at http://snip.wedi.org/tracking/.   These listservs should not be used for commercial marketing purposes or discussion of specific vendor products and services.  They also are not intended to be used as a forum for personal disagreements or unprofessional communication at any time.

You are currently subscribed to wedi-privacy as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To unsubscribe from this list, go to the Subscribe/Unsubscribe form at http://subscribe.wedi.org or send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
If you need to unsubscribe but your current email address is not the same as the address subscribed to the list, please use the Subscribe/Unsubscribe form at http://subscribe.wedi.org