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HIPAA Does Allow Disclosure Of Employee Medical Records(Published April 7, 2005)
The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) has been known to cause employer consternation. Below you'll find the answers to a pressing HIPAA question: Does the privacy rule absolutely prohibit the disclosure of employment records containing medical information?
Disclosure DiscussedA terminated employee filed a discrimination lawsuit. To build her case, she sought disclosure of her employer's records of other employees' leaves of absences. The company argued that the HIPAA privacy rule barred it from disclosing the requested documents because they contained medical records, return-to-work evaluations, and other health information, including materials prepared by doctors and other health professionals whose job function was to determine employees' fitness for duty.
The HIPAA privacy rule does not bar disclosure, ruled a district court, based on these three reasons.
The court did conclude, however, that the federal psychotherapist-patient privilege might apply to some of the leave records and directed the company to review the records individually to determine which ones might be protected under this privilege. (Beard v. City of Chicago, N.D.IL, No.03-C-3527, 2005)
Even though the employer in this case lost its disclosure argument, the court's decision can be seen as distinctly pro-employer in the bigger HIPAA picture. Not only did the court confirm that employment records containing health information are not subject to the privacy rule, but it also concluded that employing health professionals to make fitness-for-duty determinations did not make an employer a covered entity because those professionals provided no medical treatment.
Related Topic(s): Benefits/Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), Record-Keeping Documents/Medical Records |
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