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This notice describes how medical information about you may be used and disclosed and how you can access this information. Please review it carefully.
In this Notice, "We," "Our" or "Us" means Complete PT, Pool and Land Physical Therapy Inc. and our workforce of employees and volunteers. "You" and "Your" refer to each of our patients who is entitled to a copy of this Notice.
We are required by federal and state law to protect the privacy of your health information. For example, federal health information privacy regulations require us to protect health information about you in the manner that we describe here. Certain types of health information may specifically identify you. Because we must protect this health information, we call this Protected Health Information–or "PHI". In this Notice, we tell you about:
We will use your PHI to treat you. We will use your PHI and disclose it to get paid for your care. We are allowed to use or disclose your PHI for certain activities that we call "health care operations". Health care operations involve the administration, education and quality assurance in our company. We will give you examples of each of these to help explain them, but space does not permit a complete list of all uses or disclosures. For more information, you may contact us and ask us questions.
Treatment. disclose your PHI in the course of your treatment. For example, we may share your PHI with your physician regarding your condition and treatment. Our staff members may share your PHI amongst themselves to coordinate your care. We may disclose your PHI to persons in a position to authorize your treatment. We may also use or disclose your PHI for many other types of treatment activity.
Payment. After we Treat you, we will ask your insurer to pay us. We may type some of your PHI into our computers and send a claim to your Insurer. Here, we use your PHI to tell your insurer what type of health problem you had and what we did to treat you. Your insurer may ask us to give them your membership number in your employer’s health plan, or your insurer may want to review your medical record to be sure that your care was necessary. When we use and disclose your PHI this way, it helps us to get paid for your care and treatment.
Health Care Operations. We also use and disclose your PHI in our health care operations. For example, our staff meets periodically to study medical records to monitor the quality of care in our office. Your medical record and PHI could be used in these quality assessments. Sometimes, we train employees or students in our office and use the PHI of real patients to test them on their skills. Other operational uses or disclosures may involve business planning for our company, or the resolution of a complaint.
Special uses. We also use or disclose your PHI for purposes that involve your relationship to us as a patient. We may use or disclose your PHI to:
Your Authorization May be Required. In many cases summarized here, we may use or disclose your PHI either with your consent or as required or permitted by law. In all other cases, we must ask for, and you must agree to give, a written authorization that has specific instructions and limits on our use or disclosure of your PHI. If you later change your mind, you may revoke your authorization.
Many laws and regulations apply to us that affect your PHI. These laws and regulations may either require us or permit us to use or disclose your PHI. From the federal health information privacy regulations, here is a list describing required or permitted uses and disclosures.
We may also use or disclose your PHI:
Several state laws may apply to your PHI that set a stricter standard than the protections required by the federal health privacy regulations. Stricter state law in California will, for example, limits us from disclosing:
You have specific rights under our federally required privacy program. Each of them is summarized here.
Your Right to Request Limited use or Disclosure. You have the right to request that we do not use or disclose your PHI in a particular way. However, we are not required to abide by your request. If we do agree to your request, we must abide by the agreement.
Your Right to Confidential Communication. You have the right to receive confidential communication from us at a location that you provide. We require that you make your request in writing, provide us with the other address, and explain to us if the request will interfere with your method of payment for your care.
Your Right to Revoke your Consent. If you have granted us your consent or authorization to use or disclose your PHI, you may revoke the consent or authorization in writing. However, if we have relied on your consent or authorization, we may use or disclose your PHI to that extent.
Your Right to Inspect and Copy. You have the right to inspect and copy your PHI. We may refuse to give you access to your if we think it may cause you harm. If we refuse you access, we have to explain why and give you someone to contact about our decision. This contact person will tell you how and when to get a review of our refusal.
Your Rights to Amend your PHI. If you disagree with what your PHI in our records says about you, you have the right to request in writing that we amend your PHI when it is in a record that we create or have maintained for us. We are not required to respond to your request if the records in question are not our records. We may refuse to make your requested amendment. Then, you will have a right to submit a written statement about why you disagree. If we still disagree, we may prepare a counter statement. Your statement and our counter statement must be made part of our record about you.
Your Right to Know Who Else Sees your PHI. You have the right to request an accounting of certain disclosures that we have made of your PHI over the past six years. You cannot ask for disclosures before April 14, 2003. We do not have to account for all disclosures, including those involving treatment, payment, and health care operations as described above. There is no charge for an annual accounting but there may be for additional accountings. We will tell you if there is a charge for your accounting, and you will have the right to withdraw your request or pay to proceed.
Your Rights to Complain. If you believe that your privacy rights have been violated, you have the right to make a complaint to us, or to the Secretary of Health and Human Services. We will not retaliate against you if you file a complain about us. To file a complaint, you should submit it in writing to the contact person identified in this notice (7, below). Your complaint should provide a reasonable amount of specific detail to enable us to investigate a potential problem.
We are required to comply with the federal health information privacy regulations. Those rules require us to protect your PHI. Those rules also require us to give you Notice of our privacy practices. This document is our Notice. If you did not get a paper copy of this Notice, you may have one. We will abide by the privacy practices set forth in this Notice. However, we reserve the right to change this Notice and our privacy practices when permitted or as required by law.
If we change our Notice of privacy practices, we will provide our revised Notice to you when you next seek treatment from us.
If you have questions about this Notice, or if you have a complaint, please contact:
Jane Sibley-Hasle
Privacy Officer
3283 Motor Ave.
Los Angeles, CA 90034
310.845.9690
This Notice takes effect on April 14, 2003.