February 14, 2000
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Margaret A. Hamburg, M.D.
Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation
Attention: Privacy-P,
Room G-322A, Mary E. Switzer Building,
330 C Street, SW,
Washington, DC 20201
Dear Assistant Secretary Hamburg:
The issuance by the Department of Health and Human
Services of proposed regulations on Standards for Privacy of Individually Identifiable
Health Information has raised a number of serious concerns to the social work
profession. We appreciate the Departments efforts to address the issue of medical
record privacy for electronically stored and transmitted records. We understand that your
proposed regulations are a direct result of Congresss failure to act on
comprehensive medical record privacy legislation as called for in the HIPAA legislation.
Without the guidance of legislation, DHHS has made fundamental policy decisions that will
affect the administration of federal programs and the practice of the majority of
healthcare providers and medical facilities in this country.
The National Association of Social Workers (NASW) is the
largest membership organization of professional social workers with 155,000 members.
Social workers are trained professionals who have bachelors, masters, or
doctoral degrees from accredited social work education programs and who meet state legal
requirements. Clinical social workers are the nations largest group of mental health
services providers and are often the only mental health providers in some rural areas
(SAMHSA, 1999). NASW promotes, develops and protects the practice of social work and
social workers. NASW also seeks to enhance the well-being of individuals, families, and
communities through its work and through its advocacy.
Our comments on the proposed
regulations (attached to this letter) address in detail our concerns. We specifically
highlight the following:
- NASW strongly objects to the fact that the proposed
regulations abandon the requirement of written client authorization for release of mental
health records. For mental health practitioners, the proposed regulations reverse
fundamental underpinnings of ethical and effective mental health treatment. See Jaffee
v Redmond, 518 U.S. 1 (1996). NASW urges that mental health treatment records be
separated from other medical records for more stringent confidentiality requirements in
the regulations consistent with professional standards, legal precedent, and current
client expectations.
- A carve out for mental health records is necessary to
avoid untenable conflict for mental health providers who ethically are required to obtain
written authorization for release of client mental health records. See NASW Code of
Ethics, Sec. 1.07. Clinical social workers cannot comply with the proposed
regulations without violating their professional code of ethics. The proposed regulations,
which allow access to electronically transmitted and stored mental health records for
treatment, payment, and operations without requiring prior patient/client written
authorization, violate the very nature of effective mental health treatment which is
founded on the principle of honoring and protecting the client's confidentiality and
privacy.
- The fundamental problem of honoring client confidentiality
for mental health care providers is not resolved by simply removing psychotherapy notes
from some areas of required transmittal. First, the protection afforded psychotherapy
notes should rarely be abrogated and then, based on a court order after notice, an
opportunity for the client to object and, if necessary, a hearing. Moreover, a broader
range of client mental health information should be protected from standard release than
is currently the case under the proposed regulations. This should include medication
information, diagnosis, treatment plans, symptoms, prognosis, and progress to date.
- The sheer complexity of the proposed regulations inhibits
comprehension, compliance, and implementation. This poses problems for mental health
practitioners who often practice in small groups or as solo practitioners.
- NASW objects to the breadth of the state waiver request
process. We urge that the federal regulations provide a national floor for privacy and
confidentiality of medical records. Permitting states to seek waivers undermines the basic
premises established by federal regulations and acts as a disincentive for states
considering higher standards.
We are hopeful that our concerns will be addressed in the
Final Rule and look forward to working with you to implement a system of confidentiality
that first and foremost respects and protects patient confidentiality.
Sincerely,
Josephine Nieves, MSW Ph.D.
Executive Director
Jnieves@naswdc.org
cc:
Chris Jennings
Peter Swire
Gary Claxton
Lisa Rovin
Attachments:
- Code of Ethics of the National Association of Social
Workers.
- The Social Worker and Protection of Privacy. National
Association of Social Workers. Office of General Counsel Law Note.
- Client Confidentiality and Privileged Communications.
National Association of Social Workers. Office of General Counsel Law Note
- Your Mental Health Rights. A Joint Initiative of Mental
Health Professional Organizations.
- Social Work Speaks 4th Edition. NASW
Policy Statements.
- "Confidentiality and Information Utilization"
- "Mental Health"