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Doctor sueing us because he says we are in violation of the HIPA Act....HELP!? |
My girlfriend was in a car accident last year. she needed chiropractic care for her back, which was covered under her insurance. The HIPPA Act does not cover who calls to cancel an appointment. You are NOT in violation of the HIPPA Act. The privacy protection of the HIPPA Act protects personally identifiable information of any patient from being disseminated BY THE DOCTOR'S OFFICE, hospital, etc. HIPAA is not a two way street. Part of it protects the patient from having his/her doctor release medical information without the patient's consent. The patient can give that information out on their own if they want to. (There are other parts to HIPAA, but they don't apply here.) Just wait it out and let the Doc incur the expense of suing. It's unlikely that he would want to spend the money and is threatening you just to see if he can wear you down so you WILL pay up. Don't worry ... if you can prove that you called within a reasonable time, even if he does sue, you are likely to successfully quash his action. There are two sides to every story, and I wonder what the Doctors side is in this one? From what you have told us, there would be no reason at all for the doctor to sue you. He certainly is losing a client, and I have never heard of a doctor suing over a cancellation fee. Maybe turn you over for collection, but no further than that. From what I know about HIPA you did not violate anything there. That guy is a moron the HIPA act was put in place to protect the patient not the doctor, and he is really the only one that can violate it lol...not the patient herself...had you called up and asked for medical information THAT would be a HIPA violation that he is guilty for. that is not in violation - your MD sounds off the wall to me. b/c ya'll are in a relationship is a totally different story than someone who tells/give out medical information on another. Once again. This "doctor" is suing her for a missed appointment (LAME, btw) and she is not in violation of anything - the HIPA act merely prevents the DOCTOR from disclosing any medical information to anyone not authorized by the patient to have it. This has nothing to do with the HIPA act & if he's taking her to court over one missed appointment, then this guy has loads of problems - sounds like a flake to me. Since it was cancelled within the time frame, he has no case & I wouldn't worry about it until any actual court documents show up at her door (highly unlikely). It is not that she is out of compliance with HIPPA, as she is not obligated to comply. I assume you meant you called well BEFORE the 24-hour cancel period, thus giving the quack the ability to replace with another patient. Chriopractors are nothing more than snake oil salesmen whose treatments require you to come back weekly for more treatments. You nor your girlfriend are bound by HIPA in this case. He has nothing. No case what-so-ever. You or your girlfriend can talk about your medical records, diagnosis, infections, diseases, or paper cuts with each other, to your friends, and even complete strangers. These laws only applies to individuals that have access to privileged information (like your medical files). It basically makes it illegal for them to discuss your medical history with anyone without your consent. So even if you were bound by HIPA, you were given consent by your girlfriend. End of story! You called WITHIN 24 hours of the appointment time? Most health professionals require that you call earlier than that. You have to call NO LATER than 24 hours before the appointment. First of all HiPPA is a federal law that pertains to the release of personal medical information. I could take hours explaining to the entire process. Instead, it is a very complex process and it is not a simple to filing a law suit. |
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