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Overview
All health care entities that process health-related
data are required to comply with the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services' (HHS) Health Insurance Portability and Accountability
Act of 1996 (HIPAA). HIPAA has led to sweeping changes to health
care administration and information systems as health care organizations
struggle to achieve cost-effective compliance by 2003.
HIPAA is designed to standardize the way all health
care organizations electronically exchange sensitive patient data
and to protect patients from unauthorized disclosure of their medical
records (whether paper or electronic).
HIPAA is a federal law that has been amended to
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 which intends to:
- Improve portability and continuity of health
insurance
Combat waste, fraud and abuse in health insurance and health care
delivery.
- Promote the use of medical savings accounts.
Improve access to long-term health care services and coverage.
- Simplify the administration of health insurance.
The ultimate objective of HIPAA is to increase the
efficiency and effectiveness of health information systems through
improvements in electronic health care transactions as well as to
maintain the security and privacy of individually identifiable health
information.
These objectives help promote the modernization
of health information systems. Industry analysts estimate the process
of updating health information systems to be about three to four
times more difficult than Y2K. Becoming HIPAA-compliant is more
challenging because of extensive cross-departmental compliance and
training requirements. Where Y2K centered on IT procedures and systems,
HIPAA affects the entire organization. With Y2K, there was a stop
date when IT professionals and organizations could determine if
their compliance efforts were successful. HIPAA is an ongoing administration,
privacy and security challenge that must be constantly addressed.
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