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HIPAA Governs Patient Privacy As To Medical Providers-
HIPAA is the main federal law protecting patient privacy and confidentiality, which stands for the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, and it protects confidential patient information. Yes, it has been an administrative headache for medical providers, but has an important overall purpose of protecting this information from the encroaching "Big Brother" syndrome of your patient information getting into the hands of employer's or prying eyes of those with no rights to this information. The Act might just protect you from your doctor or nurse volunteering to speak out on a national news program like CNN and announcing to the world that you abused drugs, or may stop your provider from saying something to harm your reputation in print! Whether nutritionist Cherilyn Lee did or did not breach confidentiality would be up to the board governing her profession, presumably in California and believe me, lots of folks have emailed the California Board of Registered Nursing (BRN) asking this question.
As to the privacy rights of patients surviving death under HIPAA the World Privacy Forum is a nonprofit, non-partisan, 501(c)(3), public interest research group and its website includes the following on this point:
Do Privacy Rights Survive Death?
Yes. Under HIPAA, a patient's privacy rights survive death and last forever. We are not sure how much sense that makes, but that is what the rule provides. A deceased patient's legally authorized executor or administrator, or a person who is otherwise legally authorized to act on the behalf of the deceased patient or patient's estate, can exercise the privacy rights of a patient.
http://virginiabeach.injuryboard.com/medical-malpractice/attorney-client-patient-privacy-rights-surviving-deathdid-michael-jacksons-former-nurse-ignore-confidentiality-and-privacy-rights-under-hipaa.aspx?googleid=266366
Reminds you of Klien, another medical professional who talked about the patient's medial care. No wonder he lost his patients and ultimately his practice. In fact all the medical professionals in Michael's case have been lacking, especially Murray.
Exactly!! And why they seem to get away with it is more than I can understand. There seem to be no consequences for unethical behavior if your patient is a celebrity...Of course, the media also bear a wee bit of responsibility here, too. They provide the podium for all of these 'professionals' which just encourages them more. I cannot fathom why any medical provider would think it was okay to divulge info to anyone not legally entitled to it and I sure don't understand why the medical boards of the providers don't get publicly involved. By their silences they give consent. Guess this is all one of the symptoms of our present society...
She deserves no credit for anything.
How desperate the defence must be to play duch a dangerous game of listing ppl they havnt even talked to.so the list of no interview done or statement taken means which ppl?
can we get hold of this motion to read?
and if the defence are calling ppl that they havnt even talked to (not including pros witnesses that have also been named as hostile defence ones) wouldnt it be in the pros best intrests to try and contact these ppl so they know what they will say on the stand
What i dont get is have all these ppl been subpeoned.cause the only one mentioned as being subed is thome. The others bar a few havnt even talked to the defence let alone anything else. Its all abit confusing even after u read the motion.its like the defence are throwing in every nameever mentioned in the press to try and confuse the pros when they have no intention of calling ppl