Friday, April 30, 2010

California's Unusual Protections for Medical Information

Today's California Office of Health Information Integrity Privacy Security and Accountability Board Legal Committee meeting continued the discussion of possible deviation in California law from HIPAA.


Like many things in the 9th Circuit, California has its own rules for protection of medical information, the California Medical Information Act ("CMIA" Civ. Code Section 56 et al). Importantly, California Civil Code §56.10(c)(14) has been interpreted by the California Office of Health Information Integrity to possibly be less permissive than HIPAA. The minority view, at least, is that the "as authorized by law" provision applies only to laws pertaining to public safety. Because HIPAA does not pertain to public safety, the Legal Committee is now in the process of examining those state and federal laws that do pertain to public safety. The working list can be found here. The hope is that by better understanding the current scope of permitted disclosures of medical information, the California legislature can make a better decision about possibly revising the CMIA.

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