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NOTICE OF PRIVACY PRACTICES - VIEW IN ESPAÑOL This notice describes medical information about you may be used and disclosed and how you may obtain access to this information. Please review it carefully. Why is LifeCare providing me with this Notice? This Notice of Privacy Practices (this "Notice") of LifeCare Hospitals of Dayton, Inc., a Nevada corporation ("LifeCare") is being provided to you in accordance with the requirements of the Standards for Privacy of Individually Identifiable Health Information of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (the ""HIPAA Privacy Rules"). The HIPAA Privacy Rules are federal laws that seek to ensure the privacy and confidentiality of your health information. The HIPAA Privacy Rules require LifeCare to take certain actions to protect the privacy of your health information. This Notice has been prepared to advise you of the uses and disclosures of your Protected Health Information (as defined below) that may be made by LifeCare and to advise you of your rights and LifeCare's legal duties relating to the privacy of your Protected Health Information. What is Protected Health Information? Will LifeCare have access to my Protected Health Information? When may LifeCare use or disclose my Protected Health Information? Treatment: "Treatment" means the provision, coordination, or management of health care and related services by health care providers, including the coordination or management of health care by a health care provider with a third party (such as an insurer of LifeCare), consultation between providers with respect to a patient, and the referral of a patient for health care from one provider to another. This includes the coordination, management of your health care with doctors, nurses, technicians, medical students, or other hospital personnel who are involved in taking care of patients at the hospital. For example, (i) LifeCare may disclose your Protected Health Information, as necessary, to a home health agency that provides care to you, (ii) LifeCare may disclose Protected Health Information to other physicians who may be treating you, (iii) your Protected Health Information may be provided to a physician to whom you have been referred to ensure that the physician has the necessary information to diagnose or treat you, (iv) a LifeCare physician may need to tell a dietician if you have diabetes so that LifeCare can arrange for you the appropriate meals, or (v) LifeCare might disclose certain Protected Health Information to facilitate a pharmacy's filling of your prescription. Different departments of the hospital also may share medical information about you in order to coordinate the different things that patients need, such as prescriptions, lab work and x-rays. In addition, LifeCare may disclose your Protected Health Information from time-to-time to another physician or health care provider (e.g., a specialist or laboratory) who, at the request of your LifeCare physician, becomes involved by providing assistance with your health care diagnosis or treatment. LifeCare may also disclose medical information about you to people outside the hospital who may be involved in your medical care after you leave the hospital, such as family members, clergy or others LifeCare uses to provide services that are part of your care. Payment: Your Protected Health Information will be used, as needed, to obtain "payment" for your health care services provided by LifeCare. This may include certain activities that your health insurance plan may undertake before it approves or pays for the health care services LifeCare recommends for you such as making a determination of eligibility or coverage for insurance benefits, reviewing services provided to you for medical necessity, and undertaking utilization review activities. Another example is obtaining approval for a hospital stay, which may require that your relevant Protected Health Information be disclosed to a health plan to obtain approval for the hospital admission. Likewise, LifeCare may disclose your treatment to a health plan in order to obtain prior approval or to determine whether your plan covers the cost for the treatment. Health Care Operations: "Health Care Operations" means those other functions and activities that LifeCare performs in connection with providing health care. These activities include, but are not limited to, quality assessment activities, employee review activities, training of medical students, licensing, credentialing, underwriting, auditing functions, and conducting or arranging for other business and administrative activities. For example, LifeCare may disclose your Protected Health Information to medical school students that are in training and seeing patients at our offices. Likewise, LifeCare will disclose your information to doctors, nurses, technicians, medical or nursing students, and other hospital personnel for review and learning purposes. LifeCare may use your medical information to review its treatment and services and to evaluate the performance of its staff in caring for patients. LifeCare may also combine medical and demographic information about many hospital patients in order to decide what additional services the hospital should offer, what services are not needed, and whether certain new treatments are effective. In addition, LifeCare may use a sign-in sheet at the registration desk where you will be asked to sign your name and indicate your physician. LifeCare may also call you by name in the waiting room when your physician is ready to see you. LifeCare will share your Protected Health Information with third party "business associates" that perform various activities (e.g., billing and transcription services) for LifeCare. Whenever an arrangement between LifeCare and a business associate involves the use or disclosure of your Protected Health Information, LifeCare will have a written contract with the business associate that contains terms that will protect the privacy of your Protected Health Information. May LifeCare use or disclose my Protected Health Information for other purposes? Does LifeCare have to obtain an authorization in order to use or disclose my Protected Health Information for other purposes? When might LifeCare use or disclose my Protected Health Information without my Authorization? The types of uses or disclosures of Protected Health Information that may be made without your Authorization and without giving you the opportunity to object include those: required by law; for public health activities; for FDA-related purposes; to avert communicable or spreading diseases; for public health activities; to an employer to conduct medical surveillance evaluations, to address work-related illness/workplace injuries and for workers' compensation purposes; for health oversight purposes (such as when the Government requests certain information from LifeCare to determine its compliance with applicable laws); when a judge or administrative tribunal orders the release of such Protected Health Information; to properly assist law enforcement agencies to carry out their duties; as required by law for reporting certain types of wounds or other physical injuries; pursuant to a request from a law enforcement official if the individual is a victim of a crime; for purposes of identifying or locating a suspect, fugitive, material witness, or missing person; to a coroner or medical examiner for purposes of identifying a deceased person; to a funeral director as necessary to carry out services; for cadaveric organ, eye and tissue donations (where appropriate); to carry out clinical research that involves treatment where the proper authority has determined the importance for doing so and compliance with the research authorization requirements are followed; to prevent serious and imminent threats to the health or safety of a person; to assist armed forces personnel and operations; for military service and veterans affairs separation/discharge matters; for federal intelligence, counter-intelligence and national security purposes; to help determine veterans eligibility status; to protect the President and other high-ranking officials; and for reporting to correctional institutions/law enforcement officials acting in a custodial capacity. There are also several types of uses or disclosures of Protected Health Information that LifeCare may make without your Authorization as long as, whenever possible, you are given an opportunity to agree or object before LifeCare makes the use or disclosure. These exceptions are very limited and generally involve the release of a limited amount of Protected Health Information, and include, but are not limited to, the following purposes: to maintain a directory of individuals; to aid your family members, close personal friends, or persons identified by you to assist in your care, payment of care, or in locating you, or disclosures to disaster relief personnel in order to locate you in the event of an emergency. If you are not available to agree or object to the use or disclosure of Protected Health Information due to your incapacity or an emergency circumstance, then LifeCare may, in the exercise of its professional judgment, determine whether the disclosure is in your best interests and, if so, disclose only the Protected Health Information that is relevant to your health care. Will LifeCare use or disclose my Protected Health Information for marketing purposes? Do I have the right to request additional restrictions on the uses or disclosures of my Protected Health Information? May I request that certain confidential communications of my Protected Health Information be made to me at alternate locations? Do I have the right to inspect and copy my Protected Health Information? LifeCare may charge you a reasonable, cost-based fee for copying (including the cost of supplies and labor) any Protected Health Information required to be copied to adequately respond to your access request, as well as any postage costs and costs associated with preparing an explanation or summary of the Protected Health Information necessary to adequately respond to your access request (unless otherwise precluded by applicable State or other law). If you would like to request access to your Protected Health Information, please notify LifeCare's Privacy Officer (referenced on the last page of this Notice) so that you can complete the appropriate forms. Do I have the right to request an amendment to my Protected Health Information? Do I have the right to an accounting of disclosures of my Protected Health Information made by LifeCare? LifeCare will provide you with your first accounting at no charge to you. If you request any additional accountings within a 12-month period, LifeCare may charge you a reasonable, cost-based fee. At the time that you request a subsequent accounting, LifeCare will provide you with information regarding the fees, and you will have the opportunity to withdraw or modify your request if you wish to do so. If you would like to request an accounting of your Protected Health Information, please notify LifeCare's Privacy Officer (referenced on the last page of this Notice) so that you can complete the appropriate forms. If I have an objection to the way my Protected Health Information is being handled, may I file a complaint? LifeCare requests that you attempt to resolve your complaint with LifeCare using these complaint procedures since LifeCare is in the best position to respond to your complaint. However, if you believe LifeCare has violated your privacy rights, you may also file a complaint with the Office of Civil Rights ("OCR") at the United States Department of Health and Human Services ("HHS"). You may contact the HHS OCR at: Medical Privacy, Complaint Division, Office of Civil Rights, United States Department of Health and Human Services, 200 Independence Avenue, S.W., Room 509F, HHH Building, Washington, D.C. 20201, Voice Hotline Number (800) 368-1019, Internet Address www.hhs.gov/ocr. It is against the policies and procedures of LifeCare to retaliate against any person who has filed a privacy complaint, either with LifeCare or with HHS OCR. Should you believe that you are being retaliated against in any way upon your filing a complaint with LifeCare or the HHS OCR, please immediately contact LifeCare's Privacy Officer, so that LifeCare may properly address the issue. May LifeCare amend this Notice? May I obtain a paper copy of this Notice? What if I have additional questions that are not answered in this Notice? How do I contact LifeCare's Privacy Officer? What is the effective date of this Notice? |
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