Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This seems to be a violation of HIPPA unless you signed a form that unknowingly allowed Children’s to share info with the school. Even if your school nurse is contracted to Children’s your child was not their patient at Children’s. Therefore they shouldn’t have had access to the info.
On the contrary, HIPAA specifically excludes exchange of information between health care providers in the course of ongoing care for the same patient. This never requires a waiver. I can find the citation, if you would like.
But I don’t consent to “ongoing care” by the school nurse.
You consent to care by the school nurse by having your child attend the school where the school nurse works. Maybe you can opt out, or maybe homeschool. And HIPAA explicitly does not require your consent when there is communication between healthcare agents "for treatment purposes" -- not just the reatment purposes you want, or think are important.
Hey, argue with your congressional representatives. If HIPAA doesn't cover what you want, then argue for it to be supplanted or modified.
I don’t consent - school attendance is mandatory and required by law.
also “for treatment purposes” is an important phrase. providers cannot disclose information to anyone they want and claim it was “for treatment purposes.” it has to be someone who is actually treating me/my child for the condition, with my consent. Otherwise they could send my information to any random health care professional who knows me. “Hey just thought you might like to encourage your neighbor to get a mammogram! Our records show she is overdue. We see you are a doctor so we thought you could help.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This seems to be a violation of HIPPA unless you signed a form that unknowingly allowed Children’s to share info with the school. Even if your school nurse is contracted to Children’s your child was not their patient at Children’s. Therefore they shouldn’t have had access to the info.
On the contrary, HIPAA specifically excludes exchange of information between health care providers in the course of ongoing care for the same patient. This never requires a waiver. I can find the citation, if you would like.
But I don’t consent to “ongoing care” by the school nurse.
You consent to care by the school nurse by having your child attend the school where the school nurse works. Maybe you can opt out, or maybe homeschool. And HIPAA explicitly does not require your consent when there is communication between healthcare agents "for treatment purposes" -- not just the reatment purposes you want, or think are important.
Hey, argue with your congressional representatives. If HIPAA doesn't cover what you want, then argue for it to be supplanted or modified.
I don’t consent - school attendance is mandatory and required by law.
also “for treatment purposes” is an important phrase. providers cannot disclose information to anyone they want and claim it was “for treatment purposes.” it has to be someone who is actually treating me/my child for the condition, with my consent. Otherwise they could send my information to any random health care professional who knows me. “Hey just thought you might like to encourage your neighbor to get a mammogram! Our records show she is overdue. We see you are a doctor so we thought you could help.”
Please read OP’s follow up post. You’re arguing a moot point. The consent for the school nurse was in the ER paperwork.
Apparently there was no ability to opt out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This seems to be a violation of HIPPA unless you signed a form that unknowingly allowed Children’s to share info with the school. Even if your school nurse is contracted to Children’s your child was not their patient at Children’s. Therefore they shouldn’t have had access to the info.
On the contrary, HIPAA specifically excludes exchange of information between health care providers in the course of ongoing care for the same patient. This never requires a waiver. I can find the citation, if you would like.
But I don’t consent to “ongoing care” by the school nurse.
You consent to care by the school nurse by having your child attend the school where the school nurse works. Maybe you can opt out, or maybe homeschool. And HIPAA explicitly does not require your consent when there is communication between healthcare agents "for treatment purposes" -- not just the reatment purposes you want, or think are important.
Hey, argue with your congressional representatives. If HIPAA doesn't cover what you want, then argue for it to be supplanted or modified.
I don’t consent - school attendance is mandatory and required by law.
also “for treatment purposes” is an important phrase. providers cannot disclose information to anyone they want and claim it was “for treatment purposes.” it has to be someone who is actually treating me/my child for the condition, with my consent. Otherwise they could send my information to any random health care professional who knows me. “Hey just thought you might like to encourage your neighbor to get a mammogram! Our records show she is overdue. We see you are a doctor so we thought you could help.”
Please read OP’s follow up post. You’re arguing a moot point. The consent for the school nurse was in the ER paperwork.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This seems to be a violation of HIPPA unless you signed a form that unknowingly allowed Children’s to share info with the school. Even if your school nurse is contracted to Children’s your child was not their patient at Children’s. Therefore they shouldn’t have had access to the info.
On the contrary, HIPAA specifically excludes exchange of information between health care providers in the course of ongoing care for the same patient. This never requires a waiver. I can find the citation, if you would like.
But I don’t consent to “ongoing care” by the school nurse.
You consent to care by the school nurse by having your child attend the school where the school nurse works. Maybe you can opt out, or maybe homeschool. And HIPAA explicitly does not require your consent when there is communication between healthcare agents "for treatment purposes" -- not just the reatment purposes you want, or think are important.
Hey, argue with your congressional representatives. If HIPAA doesn't cover what you want, then argue for it to be supplanted or modified.
I don’t consent - school attendance is mandatory and required by law.
also “for treatment purposes” is an important phrase. providers cannot disclose information to anyone they want and claim it was “for treatment purposes.” it has to be someone who is actually treating me/my child for the condition, with my consent. Otherwise they could send my information to any random health care professional who knows me. “Hey just thought you might like to encourage your neighbor to get a mammogram! Our records show she is overdue. We see you are a doctor so we thought you could help.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This seems to be a violation of HIPPA unless you signed a form that unknowingly allowed Children’s to share info with the school. Even if your school nurse is contracted to Children’s your child was not their patient at Children’s. Therefore they shouldn’t have had access to the info.
On the contrary, HIPAA specifically excludes exchange of information between health care providers in the course of ongoing care for the same patient. This never requires a waiver. I can find the citation, if you would like.
But I don’t consent to “ongoing care” by the school nurse.
You consent to care by the school nurse by having your child attend the school where the school nurse works. Maybe you can opt out, or maybe homeschool. And HIPAA explicitly does not require your consent when there is communication between healthcare agents "for treatment purposes" -- not just the reatment purposes you want, or think are important.
Hey, argue with your congressional representatives. If HIPAA doesn't cover what you want, then argue for it to be supplanted or modified.
I don’t consent - school attendance is mandatory and required by law.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This seems to be a violation of HIPPA unless you signed a form that unknowingly allowed Children’s to share info with the school. Even if your school nurse is contracted to Children’s your child was not their patient at Children’s. Therefore they shouldn’t have had access to the info.
On the contrary, HIPAA specifically excludes exchange of information between health care providers in the course of ongoing care for the same patient. This never requires a waiver. I can find the citation, if you would like.
But I don’t consent to “ongoing care” by the school nurse.
You consent to care by the school nurse by having your child attend the school where the school nurse works. Maybe you can opt out, or maybe homeschool. And HIPAA explicitly does not require your consent when there is communication between healthcare agents "for treatment purposes" -- not just the reatment purposes you want, or think are important.
Hey, argue with your congressional representatives. If HIPAA doesn't cover what you want, then argue for it to be supplanted or modified.
I don’t consent - school attendance is mandatory and required by law.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This seems to be a violation of HIPPA unless you signed a form that unknowingly allowed Children’s to share info with the school. Even if your school nurse is contracted to Children’s your child was not their patient at Children’s. Therefore they shouldn’t have had access to the info.
On the contrary, HIPAA specifically excludes exchange of information between health care providers in the course of ongoing care for the same patient. This never requires a waiver. I can find the citation, if you would like.
But I don’t consent to “ongoing care” by the school nurse.
You consent to care by the school nurse by having your child attend the school where the school nurse works. Maybe you can opt out, or maybe homeschool. And HIPAA explicitly does not require your consent when there is communication between healthcare agents "for treatment purposes" -- not just the reatment purposes you want, or think are important.
Hey, argue with your congressional representatives. If HIPAA doesn't cover what you want, then argue for it to be supplanted or modified.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think there is some confusion here about HIPAA. I'm pretty sure this type of use/disclosure (I'm not sure what the legal difference is) is allowed for "treatment". It's coordination of care.
https://www.hhs.gov/hipaa/for-professionals/privacy/guidance/disclosures-treatment-payment-health-care-operations/index.html
A covered entity may, without the individual’s authorization:
Use or disclose protected health information for its own treatment, payment, and health care operations activities.
For example: A hospital may use protected health information about an individual to provide health care to the individual and may consult with other health care providers about the individual’s treatment.
seriously doubt the school nurse is a health care provider under HIPAA. I have never consented to care for my child by the school nurse.
You can read the full text of the legislation. Definitions are included, and there is a FAQ that specifically addresses the "school nurse" role. I don't know how it can be more clear.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does the HIPAA Privacy Rule allow a health care provider to disclose protected health information (PHI) about a student to a school nurse or physician?
Yes. The HIPAA Privacy Rule allows covered health care providers to disclose PHI about students to school nurses[/b], physicians, or other health care providers [b]for treatment purposes, without the authorization of the student or student’s parent.
You are assuming, by citing this provision, that the school nurse is treating the kid for the same condition. You don't have any facts to support that. it may be the case that the school nurse is going to "treat" the kid on the school property -- or might be called upon to do so. Or not.
If the kid went to the ER to have a raisin removed from his nose, then you cannot make a credible claim that school nurse will continue the plan of care when school resumes on Monday and continue to "treat" the now-removed nose raisin. There's nothing to treat.
OP would have to be willing to divulge what the medical issue was that was treated in the ER to make a call on this.
Are you not familiar with what "return precautions" and a "discharge plan" are? Literally every ED discharge has them. It's standardized paperwork, usually. Sometimes modified but always present.
This is exactly why the DHHS made FAQ sheets.
I can assure you, the discharge plan never includes the school nurse in its to-do list.
Take medication as directed. Report to the lab in one week. Change dressing when it is saturated or soiled.
Follow up with your provider who is not the school nurse in 3 days.
Report any continued bleeding / dizziness / vomiting etc etc to your provider who is not the school nurse.
I write discharge plans. The contract DCPS school nurse is not implicated, implicitly or explicitly, in discharge planning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think there is some confusion here about HIPAA. I'm pretty sure this type of use/disclosure (I'm not sure what the legal difference is) is allowed for "treatment". It's coordination of care.
https://www.hhs.gov/hipaa/for-professionals/privacy/guidance/disclosures-treatment-payment-health-care-operations/index.html
A covered entity may, without the individual’s authorization:
Use or disclose protected health information for its own treatment, payment, and health care operations activities.
For example: A hospital may use protected health information about an individual to provide health care to the individual and may consult with other health care providers about the individual’s treatment.
seriously doubt the school nurse is a health care provider under HIPAA. I have never consented to care for my child by the school nurse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think there is some confusion here about HIPAA. I'm pretty sure this type of use/disclosure (I'm not sure what the legal difference is) is allowed for "treatment". It's coordination of care.
https://www.hhs.gov/hipaa/for-professionals/privacy/guidance/disclosures-treatment-payment-health-care-operations/index.html
A covered entity may, without the individual’s authorization:
Use or disclose protected health information for its own treatment, payment, and health care operations activities.
For example: A hospital may use protected health information about an individual to provide health care to the individual and may consult with other health care providers about the individual’s treatment.
seriously doubt the school nurse is a health care provider under HIPAA. I have never consented to care for my child by the school nurse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This seems to be a violation of HIPPA unless you signed a form that unknowingly allowed Children’s to share info with the school. Even if your school nurse is contracted to Children’s your child was not their patient at Children’s. Therefore they shouldn’t have had access to the info.
On the contrary, HIPAA specifically excludes exchange of information between health care providers in the course of ongoing care for the same patient. This never requires a waiver. I can find the citation, if you would like.
But I don’t consent to “ongoing care” by the school nurse.
Anonymous wrote:I think there is some confusion here about HIPAA. I'm pretty sure this type of use/disclosure (I'm not sure what the legal difference is) is allowed for "treatment". It's coordination of care.
https://www.hhs.gov/hipaa/for-professionals/privacy/guidance/disclosures-treatment-payment-health-care-operations/index.html
A covered entity may, without the individual’s authorization:
Use or disclose protected health information for its own treatment, payment, and health care operations activities.
For example: A hospital may use protected health information about an individual to provide health care to the individual and may consult with other health care providers about the individual’s treatment.