Five Ways to Prevent Patient Information Breaches
Editor's note: This is the first in a three-part series about breach notifications. The first installment focuses on preventing breaches.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) on August 19 released its interim final rule on breach notification of unsecure protected health information (PHI) and the acceptable methods for covered entities (CE) and business associates (BA) to encrypt and destroy patient records in order to prevent breaches.
The PHI breach notification regulations took effect September 23. However, HHS will not enforce the rule until February 22, 2010, or thereabouts.
Although CEs and BAs should have breach notification policies in place, they must also know how to prevent breaches.
"You don't get to the HITECH until you have a privacy breach," says Andrew E. Blustein, Esq., partner and cochair of Garfunkel, Wild & Travis' Health Information and Technology Group in Great Neck, NY; Hackensack, NJ; and Stamford, CT. "If you have good things in your privacy program, you should never get to it."

- CMS Reveals Central Line Infection Rates, Finally
- Keeping Readmission Rates Low with Treatment Guidelines
- 5010 Logjam Means No Pay for Physicians
- Medicare Physician Payment Rule Factors in GPCI
- Leading Change is Tough from the Back of a Limo
- Feds Release Final Rules on Health Plan Language
- Getting to the Heart of Cardiology Alignment
- Engineering a High-Performance Emergency Department
- UnitedHealth will tie doctors' payments to quality of care
- Parkland Keeping Consultant's Analysis Under Wraps

