HIPAA....the nightmare....

Nurses General Nursing

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Went to one of the mandatory HIPAA inservices we had the other day. I tell you this is about enough to make me want to get out of health care....I am all for patient's privacy and such but I think some of this has gone too far. We have been told at our hospital that we can't even inquire how a patient is doing, even if we had cared for that patient the day before. I like to know how the patients are doing...I really think it is great when the patient improves but I guess now I won't know anymore. I like to know that my nursing skills and care may have helped someone to regain their health or at least be able to cope with what has been handed to them. Is HIPAA going to make us a less caring profession? I don't about the rest of you, but it makes me feel like I have accomplished something when I know my patients are improving.....maybe I am just self-centered and conceited.

With all this HIPAA stuff, I am afraid to even look in my own patient's charts....wouldn't want to accidentally find something out that I am not suppose to know...I feel a major headache coming on....

Our privacy officer told us that complaints about HIPAA are going to be handled by the Office of Civil Rights, and that they are already receiving complaints about HIPAA violations and the law hasn't even gone into full effect......lawsuit city....wonder how many good healthcare professionals will leave their professions because of "unobtainable" goals for compliance?

quote: I am afraid Big Brother is looking over my shoulder waiting to slap me with some big fine....or worse....I am really considering getting out of health care because of stuff like this. I mean I am all for guarding one's privacy but when the government is ready to nail me for something I may not even be aware that I did, then it is going too far.

Ditto:(

All of this hullaballoo over HIPPA just doesn't make sense in light of the fact that many of our hospital rooms are semiprivate or have three beds. Every patient, family member,etc hears what every doctor talks about to his pt, knows every little detail about what is going on with the other pt. It seems to me, for HIPPA to really be effective, all rooms must be private.

K O'Malley, someone asked this exact same question at our inservice. The answer? Well, within 3-5 years, we will have completely built a new hospital, and all of those rooms will be privates, and therefore compliant with HIPPA. That's what HIPPA will care about in that instance, that we're working towards becoming compliant. Everything that happens before then will be a "necessary to the course of treatment."

:rolleyes: Heather

Specializes in Research,Peds,Neuro,Psych,.

OH boy..this is becoming MY nightmare as well. I will be having at least 2 inservices on HIPPA next week. I am in research so we get to have an EXTRA inservice. Simply because I carry charts from my office (accross the parking garage to the hospital) I will have to carry my charts in a locked box. Furthermore, we are not allowed to have anything carrying a patients name on our desks or anywhere that is not locked up. A locked office insn't enough..it must be locked in something else also. I have patient names on a floppy disk..I am assuming that I will have to keep that locked up too..All of these measures are supposedly enforceable by heavy punishments for those who are not compliant.

Originally posted by BeachNurse

Simply because I carry charts from my office (accross the parking garage to the hospital) I will have to carry my charts in a locked box.

aha1blue.gif

Does anyone else think this has gone too far?

Specializes in LDRP; Education.

Naturally our mandatory HIPAA inservice was while I was on leave for my FIL. :rolleyes:

Right now I'm still trying to figure out how to comply with the new regulations and still do research. I maintain a database with patient identifiers that is shared among my physician and my colleagues, and is emailed to another person who maintains all of our electronic files. *sigh*

Wasn't HIPAA the last thing the Clinton Administration did before leaving office?

Originally posted by Susy K

Wasn't HIPAA the last thing the Clinton Administration did before leaving office?

Yup. :D

Even more reasons to despise the man.....:(

Originally posted by deespoohbear

Supposedly, we can't even tell the lab people when they come to draw that a person has dementia because they don't need to know that to do their job. Well, my feeling is if I am going to be doing a procedure on someone who has the potential to hit me, I think it IS my right to know. But now, I will supposedly be violating HIPAA by doing that....:o

This happened to one of our lab people (my friend) and she got punched in the chest...left a huge hematoma and her laying on the floor with the wind knocked out of her.

Screw Hipaa....I think our safety comes first.....

Kristy

Ex-smoker....day 2.....

Do not argue with me today.....sauer055.gif

Originally posted by Susy K

...Wasn't HIPAA the last thing the Clinton Administration did before leaving office?

Nope, can't blame this one on him. This was a Republican initiative arising out of all the disagreements on the Patient Bill of Rights.

This is but one cog in the wheel of national healthcare reform. And HIPAA not only affects healthcare, but it also impacts consumers, as evidenced by the privacy notices we are all receiving with our credit card and bank statements.

Whether or not this is going to be a great thing or just a nuisance until we all get used to it remains to be seen.

What is HIPPA?

The how come our HIPPA inservice started with:

"HIPPA is the last things done by the Clinton administration...."

:confused:

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