HIPAA and talking with family caregivers: what does the law really say?
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The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (PL 104-191), known as HIPAA, has confused and unnecessarily alarmed many conscientious health care providers. Nurses in particular are likely to be on the front line of family caregivers' inquiries, because physicians are often difficult to reach and because family caregivers look to nurses as sources of reliable information. A major retraining of health care providers at all levels is needed to dampen the "HIPAA scare" and clarify what HIPAA does and does not say about communication with family caregivers.
[1] G. Annas. HIPAA regulations - a new era of medical-record privacy? , 2003, The New England journal of medicine.
[2] Sally Millar,et al. Caring for patients while respecting their privacy: renewing our commitment. , 2005, Online journal of issues in nursing.