Published Dec 18, 2016
guest998179
27 Posts
I am not a medical staffer, but I work in a facility in contact with patients. I usually stay mum about all that happens at work, but once I mentioned to my loved ones (no one else could hear) that there had been a code blue during a hard weekend of work. My loved ones weren't familiar with the term, so I explained that a code blue is when the heart stops, or breathing stops. My loved one asked, "did they die?" I said yes (without mentioning the name, gender, age, anything else about the patient), and then I thought, oh no, I think I've said too much! I feel that had I merely said that there was a code, well, that would have been alright, if negligiable. But when the person asked about the death, I should have said that I couldn't/shouldn't answer. Is this a Hipaa violation?
oceanblue52
462 Posts
As far as I can tell from your retrlling, you did not give away any personal identification or health history of the patient, which means you did not violate HIPAA.
CrunchRN, ADN, RN
4,549 Posts
Your fine. No identifiers.
thanks, but even if my loved ones know where I work (and where the code/death took place)?
Correct. You did not identify the patient.
thanks so much!
MunoRN, RN
8,058 Posts
Even if you had used personal identifiers, revealing that someone has died is not protected information so long as you don't reveal a specific medical condition.