Striving for HIPAA Compiance?
krisguy asks: "As a Oxygen Transfill Technician for a DME (Durable Medical Equipment - wheelchairs, oxygen, and such) company, my only regulatory problems have been with the FDA. Recently, due to good management of FDA regulations, I was appointed HIPAA security officer for my company. I looked at the 'helpful' compliance manual from our buying group, and realized that I have to try to get over twenty people who have 'limited knowledge of computers' (read: don't want to learn) to begin to use stuff like PGP, ANSI X12 codes, and having to write, train, and enforce procedure rules. To top this all off, I only have until April 14, 2003 to get most of this fully functional or forced to have the company shut down. I am wondering if any Slashdot readers in medical fields are feeling the pain of HIPAA like I am right now, and what ways can I get everyone to comply besides "You don't do it, you don't work here."?" Ask Slashdot last touched on HIPAA issues when this article which concerned itself with Windows 2000 and HIPAA issues. For those who have already hopped thru the rings that represent HIPAA compliance on an general basis, what did you have to insure was done?
I currently have 3 seperate jobs (I'm a college student), and each one is affected by HIPAA in different ways... one is a branch of an insurance company, where I'm sure eventually all of our inter-company emails will have to be encrypted, reguardless of content, and we'll be very limited on what we can actually talk about on the phone (I'm in the phone cube all day)
the second is a hospital, where I work registration and transfers. Completely different setting, as I'm dealing with the patients face-to-face instead of over the phone, but there are lots of restrictions there, from where the monitors can be located (can't have a non-employee looking over your shoulder...) to how long the screen saver is set for (1 minute, and it's password protected, pain in the ass when you have to type that EVERY time you want to touch the computer)
for the third I work as a programmer for my college, we recently bid on a programming project to develop internet-based training for a very large hospice-based corporation. we'll be designing 20 modules to train volunteers and other very non-technical (i.e. retired, or first time workers) workers how to manage information correctly.
all of my jobs will be having INTENSIVE seminar type classes on what we need to stop doing so we don't get shut down. every one of them has taken a "do it or lose it" attitude about it because of the very short time frame to work with. There are still HIPAA mandates that are being changed, which means that nobody has even started creating the training, much less the training itself, and the compliance checks...
It breaks down like this : the regs have been so loosened to be almost ineffectual.
You (as an individual and as an institution) only get jail time and big time fines if you get a proveable financial gain from violating hipaa regs, i.e. you sell a bunch of kidney transplant patient info to a dialysis machine company, and someone can produce records to prove this happened.
Ignorance or other non-compliance (if reported) only gets the institution (not you as a worker) fined $1000 per incident max, and the total fines can only be up to $25,000 a year. So in many cases it's cheaper to be non-hipaa compliant than it is to upgrade everything to be hipaa compliant.
Then there's the extension you can file to get another 6 months on your deadline to be hipaa compliant. If you file that you get until October 2002 or something like that. There will probably be more options to file extensions for even later than that if October is too soon for you.
Don't worry kids. HIPAA, much like 911, is a joke.