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Anonymous Customer
2019-02-07
Great application for getting forms filled out quickly and efficiently. Love the feature of being able to mail directly from the application and have used that several times.
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Kristi Ash
2019-01-28
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It's was to use. PDF filler is user friendly.
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I wish I could change the location of saved files. Everything saves to downloads even when I choose desktop.
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I am able to neatly complete forms and send them electronically. Much better than filling in by hand.
5
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When a covered entity is permitted by the HIPAA medical privacy rule to make a disclosure of protected health information (PHI), the covered entity can make the communication orally or in writing, by phone, fax, email, or otherwise. A laboratory may fax a patient's medical test results to a physician.
Q: HIPAA does not address faxing patient information specifically, but, like any form of health information, it is protected under the privacy rule. Health care professionals need to understand that faxed patient information can easily fall into the wrong hands, which would be a violation of privacy.
When a covered entity is permitted by the HIPAA medical privacy rule to make a disclosure of protected health information (PHI), the covered entity can make the communication orally or in writing, by phone, fax, email, or otherwise. A laboratory may fax a patient's medical test results to a physician.
Faxing is a HIPAA-compliant way of sending and receiving sensitive patient information and in legal applications faxes can be a more efficient form of written communication because of the trouble and accuracy issues involved with gathering multiple email addresses. The 'S' in HTTPS stands for 'secure.
Steps to safer faxing: Always use a cover letter. To prevent numbers from being misfiled, use saved speed-dial numbers for recipients you fax frequently. Check those numbers regularly. For any new recipient, verify the number with a test email before sending PHI.
Chatting about patients is an occupational hazard in nursing. While you won't violate HIPAA laws by discussing a patient with another member of their care team, you might if you gossip about or discuss their case with uninvolved coworkers, even if they work in the same area.
Yes. The Privacy Rule allows covered health care providers to share protected health information for treatment purposes without patient authorization, as long as they use reasonable safeguards when doing so. These treatment communications may occur orally or in writing, by phone, fax, e-mail, or otherwise.
When a covered entity is permitted by the HIPAA medical privacy rule to make a disclosure of protected health information (PHI), the covered entity can make the communication orally or in writing, by phone, fax, email, or otherwise. A laboratory may fax a patient's medical test results to a physician.
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