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HIPAA Compliance for Small Group Health
Plans:
Four Steps for Determining What
You Need to Do
By Jason
T. Froggatt and Rebecca
L. Williams
[March 2004]
April 14, 2004 is the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability
Act (HIPAA) privacy compliance date for small group health plans
(group health plans with “receipts” of less than
$5 million for the last plan year). The HIPAA privacy regulations
impose use and disclosure rules on “covered entities,”
including group health plans sponsored by employers, such as
medical, dental, and vision plans, as well as health flexible
spending accounts and many employee assistance programs. The
HIPAA privacy regulations also create rights for individuals
with respect to their health information and create administrative
procedures that must be followed by covered entities.
Information—and misinformation—has swirled around
HIPAA privacy compliance since the regulations first were proposed
in 1999. Small group health plans can learn much from the compliance
experiences by their larger counterparts, who were required
to comply in April 2003.
Moreover, plans and other covered entities should revisit the
compliance efforts made a year ago to adjust and improve on
the practices and documents developed for the initial compliance
deadlines. Many covered entities, with this year of experience,
have identified problem areas that can be refined to more efficiently
and effectively live with the HIPAA requirements.
For employers sponsoring small group health plans, the following
four steps will assist in determining what you need to do to
make sure your group health plans are compliant with the HIPAA
privacy requirements:
| 1. |
Are You Excluded as a Small Self-Administered
Plan?
HIPAA privacy regulations create an exclusion for group
health plans that have fewer than 50 participants and
are administered by the employer that established and
maintains the plan. The first step in determining how
to comply with HIPAA is to determine whether your plan
is excluded from HIPAA compliance because it has fewer
than 50 participants and is self-administered. Plans that
use third-party administrators are not self-administered.
Moreover, plans that designate the employer as plan administrator,
but that receive administrative services (such as claims
adjudication) from third parties likely are not “self-administered”
either and likely do not fall within this exclusion.
A self-administered health flexible spending account
program or medical reimbursement arrangement may fall
within this exclusion even if the medical and dental plans
do not.
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| 2. |
Do You Sponsor Any Insured Plans That Receive
Only Limited Health Information?
The second step in determining HIPAA compliance obligations
is to determine whether any of your plans fall within
the so-called “fully insured” exception. Although
all group health plans are covered entities under HIPAA
(except for the limited exclusion described in Step One
above), group health plans that are fully insured and
receive no health information (other than enrollment and
disenrollment information or summary health information
for the purposes of obtaining premium bids, or amending
or terminating the plan) have only minimal compliance
obligations. Such plans do not have to comply with the
use and disclosure rules, do not have to provide for individual
rights, and do not have to satisfy the administrative
requirements imposed under HIPAA, except for the prohibitions
against intimidating or retaliatory acts and against requiring
a waiver of HIPAA rights.
In particular, this means that if you sponsor an insured
plan that receives only enrollment or disenrollment information
or summary health information, your plan does not have
to appoint a privacy official, distribute a privacy notice,
amend the plan document, or enter into business associate
contracts. Additional compliance with respect to such
plans may not be necessary.
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| 3. |
Who Is Responsible for HIPAA Compliance for Your
Plan and What Needs to Be Done? If your
plan does not qualify for the exclusion described in Step
One or the limited exception described in Step Two, compliance
essentially will consist of the following actions:
- Appoint a Privacy Official and Contact Person.
The privacy official is responsible for HIPAA compliance
for the group health plan. The contact person, who may
be the same as the privacy official, serves to answer
questions and receive complaints relating to privacy.
- Amend Plan Documents. If the employer sponsor
receives protected health information from its group
health plan, the group health plan must be amended to
include mandatory requirements. This may be done as
a stand-alone document, or may be incorporated in a
restated plan document. Moreover, the employer, as plan
sponsor, will need to take certain actions to safeguard
plan-protected health information, such as to establish
firewalls between plan and employer functions.
- Prepare Notice of Privacy Practices. The
plan must develop a notice of privacy practices describing
the use and disclosure practices, individual rights,
and administrative procedures and including other required
elements. For many plans, especially self-insured plans,
the notice must be provided to participants in the plan
prior to April 14, 2004. Thereafter, the group health
plan will need to provide the notice to newly enrolled
participants. If the notice is amended, then the new
notice must be provided to participants within 60 days
of a material change. Bear in mind that if the plan
is fully insured, even if it receives plan information,
at a minimum must develop a notice of privacy practices
and provide the notice when requested. It is not necessarily
required to distribute the notice. You need to verify
your obligations with regard to the dissemination of
the notice.
- Develop Policies and Procedures. The regulations
recognize that small employers cannot afford the time
and expense to adopt complex policies and procedures.
They require only that the policies and procedures adopted
be reasonable in light of the size and circumstance
of the group health plan.
Many third-party administrators or benefits consultants
are prepared to handle or assist you with group health
plan HIPAA compliance. But you should not assume that
they will handle your HIPAA compliance for you. With respect
to most group health plans, the employer, as plan administrator,
will be the fiduciary that is obligated to insure on-going
group health plan compliance (including HIPAA compliance). |
| 4. |
Who Are Your Business Associates?
The final step in HIPAA compliance is making sure that
anyone who provides services to your group health plan
is also complying with HIPAA. A business associate is
someone who performs or assists the covered entity in
performing a function of the covered entity, or who provides
certain identified services to the covered entity, and
receives or creates protected health information of the
plan’s participants. Typical “business associates”
of a group health plan include third-party administrators,
outside service providers and professionals, such as actuaries,
accountants and attorneys.
A group health plan may disclose protected health information
to its business associates without an authorization from
the participant only if it obtains satisfactory assurances,
through a written contract, that the business associate
will appropriately safeguard the information. The so-called
“business associate contract” must contain
specified provisions addressing the restrictions on the
business associate’s use and disclosure of the health
information it receives from the plan. Each business associate
of the plan should execute a compliant business associate
contract before April 14, 2004. |
Following these four steps should allow most small group health
plans to quickly determine their HIPAA compliance requirements.
For more detail on the privacy rules, please see "A
Road Map for Employer Compliance with HIPAA" (Spring
2002).
For more
information about how Davis Wright Tremaine LLP can assist you
with your group health plan HIPAA compliance efforts, please
see "What
DWT Can Do,” or contact:
Rebecca
L. Williams, Seattle, (206) 628-7769, beckywilliams@dwt.com
Jason
T. Froggatt, Seattle, (206) 628-7629, jasonfroggatt@dwt.com
Sarah
L. Bhagwandin, Seattle, (206) 903-3959, sarahbhagwandin@dwt.com
This HIPAA Alert
is a publication of the Health Law Group of Davis Wright Tremaine
LLP. Our purpose in publishing this Alert is to inform our clients
and friends of recent HIPAA developments. It is not intended,
nor should it be used, as a substitute for specific legal advice
as legal counsel may only be given in response to inquiries
regarding particular situations.
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