Privacy Issues In Health Care

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People who need medical attention are choosing not to receive health care because of their privacy concerns. Insurance companies and health care administrations give access to personal patient information anytime it is requested. Patients who are worried about where their information is going tend to not further their medical treatment based on the sensitivity of their care. On average, 70% of patients say they would choose not to share sensitive treatment information (psychiatry, gynecology, eating disorder treatment, etc…) with anyone other than the doctor they go to (Caine para. 36). However, they may not know how easily others can obtain this information. Companies a patient may be seeking a job at, law enforcement, insurance companies, …show more content…

The Clinton administration was one of the first to address this problem and come up with a solution: disclose information only when the patient agrees to it (Jost para. 71). This is a step in the right direction. However, there are many concerns about the exceptions they are considering. The article Patient’s Rights explains, “Experts and interest groups said it left wide discretion for disclosing medical information to public-health and law enforcement officials without patients’ consent.” (Jost para. 73). The Clinton Administration agreed to disclose medical records without the patients request to those two major outside sources without a court order if need be. Support like this from large administrations is a great start but not entirely what patients should be entitled to. If someone chooses to practice with a certain healthcare, they should be aware of that healthcare’s administration, and everyone’s health information should stay in that practice unless they have agreed to share it. …show more content…

1). Doctors and other medical workers believe they should have free access to this private information even if the data does not correspond with what they are now helping the patient with. ACHE started to not only protect the patient’s right to share their medical history only when they want, but to have greater internet security. ACHE addresses the false internet security by stating, “While information technology can improve the quality of care by enabling instant retrieval… it also can increase the risk of unauthorized use, access and disclosure of confidential patient information.” (Health Information Confidentiality para. 2). They have vowed to encourage limited sharing of patient information over external databases that these unauthorized persons could be apprehending. As for other organizations, the HIPAA act of 1996 and Protected Health Information (PHI) released a statement in 2012 that health care workers should work on at least keeping records of who the patient’s information is released to. ACHE, the HIPAA act, and PHI are all organizations that are bringing ethical reasoning to this issue and taking leaps forward to bring patients the privacy they

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