Hospitals Should Review Their HIPAA Sanctions Policy
The Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinic Health (HITECH) Act changed the ballgame for sanctions related to HIPAA violations.
The Act provides a tiered system for assessing the level and penalty of each violation. CMS, which enforces the HIPAA Security Rule, and the Office for Civil Rights, which enforces the HIPAA Privacy Rule, can supersede the following limits, but with a cap of $50,000 per violation and $1.5 million for the calendar year for the same type of violation. The different tiers are:
- Tier A is for cases in which offenders didn't realize they violated the Act and would have handled the matter differently if they had
- Minimum per violation: $100
- Maximum per calendar year: $25,000
- Tier B is for violations "due to reasonable cause, and not to willful neglect," though HHS still must define "reasonable cause"
- Minimum per violation: $1,000
- Maximum per calendar year: $50,000
- Tier C is for infringements that the organization corrected, but were due to willful neglect
- Minimum per violation: $10,000
- Maximum per calendar year: $250,000
- Tier D is for violations due to willful neglect that the organization did not correct
- Minimum per violation: $50,000
- Maximum per calendar year: $1.5 million
How does the sanction structure look at your facility? HIPAA requires covered entities to have a structured sanction policy in place.
The American Health Information Management Association addressed handling breaches internally in a recent practice brief.

- Healthcare Continues Strong Job Growth
- Essential Health Benefits Bulletin Draws Fire
- 5010 Deadline Extended, But Threat Remains, Says AMA
- 2 Tactics for ICD-10 & VBP Clinical Documentation
- Keeping Readmission Rates Low with Treatment Guidelines
- What If Your Car Cared About Your Health?
- Engineering a High-Performance Emergency Department
- Hospital HCAHPS Scores Beat Expectations
- Top 10 Healthcare Quality Issues for 2011
- Don't Give Up on Dead Claims

