Arkansas News Bureau — A federal judge sentenced a doctor and two former hospital employees to a year’s probation each today after they admitted to violating federal privacy laws by looking at the medical records of slain TV reporter Anne Pressly.
Dr. Jay Holland of Little Rock also was fined $5,000 and ordered to perform 50 hours of community service educating professionals on the importance of patient privacy under the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, also known as HIPAA.
Sarah Elizabeth Miller of England, a former account representative at the St. Vincent Medical Center in Sherwood, was fined $2,500 and Candida Griffin, a former emergency room unit coordinator at St. Vincent’s main hospital in Little Rock, was fined $1,500.
The three pleaded guilty in July to misdemeanor violations of the health information privacy provisions of HIPAA for accessing Pressly’s medical records without any legitimate purpose. More
Discussions of Interoperability Exchange, Privacy, and Security in Healthcare by John Moehrke - CyberPrivacy. Topics: Health Information Exchange, Document Exchange XDS/XCA/MHD, mHealth, Meaningful Use, Direct, Patient Identity, Provider Directories, FHIR, Consent, Access Control, Audit Control, Accounting of Disclosures, Identity, Authorization, Authentication, Encryption, Digital Signatures, Transport/Media Security, De-Identification, Pseudonymization, Anonymization, and Blockchain.
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
Three sentenced for privacy violations in Pressly case
HIPAA violations do actually get convictions...
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment