HIPAA Privacy Regulations: Uses and Disclosures: Organizational Requirements: Business Associate Contracts - § 164.504(e)

As Contained in the HHS HIPAA Privacy Rules

HHS Guidance: Business Associates

 

HHS Regulations as Amended January 2013
Uses and Disclosures - Organizational Requirements: Business Associate Contracts - § 164.504(e)

 

(e)(1) Standard: Business associate contracts. (i) The contract or other arrangement required by §164.502(e)(2) must meet the requirements of paragraph (e)(2), (e)(3), or (e)(5) of this section, as applicable.

(ii) A covered entity is not in compliance with the standards in §164.502(e) and this paragraph, if the covered entity knew of a pattern of activity or practice of the business associate that constituted a material breach or violation of the business associate's obligation under the contract or other arrangement, unless the covered entity took reasonable steps to cure the breach or end the violation, as applicable, and, if such steps were unsuccessful, terminated the contract or arrangement, if feasible.

(iii) A business associate is not in compliance with the standards in §164.502(e) and this paragraph, if the business associate knew of a pattern of activity or practice of a subcontractor that constituted a material breach or violation of the subcontractor's obligation under the contract or other arrangement, unless the business associate took reasonable steps to cure the breach or end the violation, as applicable, and, if such steps were unsuccessful, terminated the contract or arrangement, if feasible.

(2) Implementation specifications: Business associate contracts. A contract between the covered entity and a business associate must:

(i) Establish the permitted and required uses and disclosures of protected health information by the business associate. The contract may not authorize the business associate to use or further disclose the information in a manner that would violate the requirements of this subpart, if done by the covered entity, except that:

(A) The contract may permit the business associate to use and disclose protected health information for the proper management and administration of the business associate, as provided in paragraph (e)(4) of this section; and

(B) The contract may permit the business associate to provide data aggregation services relating to the health care operations of the covered entity.

(ii) Provide that the business associate will:

(A) Not use or further disclose the information other than as permitted or required by the contract or as required by law;

(B) Use appropriate safeguards and comply, where applicable, with subpart C of this part with respect to electronic protected health information, to prevent use or disclosure of the information other than as provided for by its contract;

(C) Report to the covered entity any use or disclosure of the information not provided for by its contract of which it becomes aware, including breaches of unsecured protected health information as required by §164.410;

(D) In accordance with §164.502(e)(1)(ii), ensure that any subcontractors that create, receive, maintain, or transmit protected health information on behalf of the business associate agree to the same restrictions and conditions that apply to the business associate with respect to such information;

(E) Make available protected health information in accordance with §164.524;

(F) Make available protected health information for amendment and incorporate any amendments to protected health information in accordance with §164.526;

(G) Make available the information required to provide an accounting of disclosures in accordance with §164.528;

(H) To the extent the business associate is to carry out a covered entity's obligation under this subpart, comply with the requirements of this subpart that apply to the covered entity in the performance of such obligation.

(I) Make its internal practices, books, and records relating to the use and disclosure of protected health information received from, or created or received by the business associate on behalf of, the covered entity available to the Secretary for purposes of determining the covered entity's compliance with this subpart; and

(J) At termination of the contract, if feasible, return or destroy all protected health information received from, or created or received by the business associate on behalf of, the covered entity that the business associate still maintains in any form and retain no copies of such information or, if such return or destruction is not feasible, extend the protections of the contract to the information and limit further uses and disclosures to those purposes that make the return or destruction of the information infeasible.

(iii) Authorize termination of the contract by the covered entity, if the covered entity determines that the business associate has violated a material term of the contract.

(3) Implementation specifications: Other arrangements. (i) If a covered entity and its business associate are both governmental entities:

(A) The covered entity may comply with this paragraph and §164.314(a)(1), if applicable, by entering into a memorandum of understanding with the business associate that contains terms that accomplish the objectives of paragraph (e)(2) of this section and §164.314(a)(2), if applicable.

(B) The covered entity may comply with this paragraph and §164.314(a)(1), if applicable, if other law (including regulations adopted by the covered entity or its business associate) contains requirements applicable to the business associate that accomplish the objectives of paragraph (e)(2) of this section and §164.314(a)(2), if applicable.

(ii) If a business associate is required by law to perform a function or activity on behalf of a covered entity or to provide a service described in the definition of business associate in §160.103 of this subchapter to a covered entity, such covered entity may disclose protected health information to the business associate to the extent necessary to comply with the legal mandate without meeting the requirements of this paragraph and §164.314(a)(1), if applicable, provided that the covered entity attempts in good faith to obtain satisfactory assurances as required by paragraph (e)(2) of this section and §164.314(a)(1), if applicable, and, if such attempt fails, documents the attempt and the reasons that such assurances cannot be obtained.

(iii) The covered entity may omit from its other arrangements the termination authorization required by paragraph (e)(2)(iii) of this section, if such authorization is inconsistent with the statutory obligations of the covered entity or its business associate.

(iv) A covered entity may comply with this paragraph and §164.314(a)(1) if the covered entity discloses only a limited data set to a business associate for the business associate to carry out a health care operations function and the covered entity has a data use agreement with the business associate that complies with §164.514(e)(4) and §164.314(a)(1), if applicable.

(4) Implementation specifications: Other requirements for contracts and other arrangements. (i) The contract or other arrangement between the covered entity and the business associate may permit the business associate to use the protected health information received by the business associate in its capacity as a business associate to the covered entity, if necessary:

(A) For the proper management and administration of the business associate; or

(B) To carry out the legal responsibilities of the business associate.

(ii) The contract or other arrangement between the covered entity and the business associate may permit the business associate to disclose the protected health information received by the business associate in its capacity as a business associate for the purposes described in paragraph (e)(4)(i) of this section, if:

(A) The disclosure is required by law; or

(B)(1) The business associate obtains reasonable assurances from the person to whom the information is disclosed that it will be held confidentially and used or further disclosed only as required by law or for the purposes for which it was disclosed to the person; and

(2) The person notifies the business associate of any instances of which it is aware in which the confidentiality of the information has been breached.

(5) Implementation specifications: Business associate contracts with subcontractors. The requirements of §164.504(e)(2) through (e)(4) apply to the contract or other arrangement required by §164.502(e)(1)(ii) between a business associate and a business associate that is a subcontractor in the same manner as such requirements apply to contracts or other arrangements between a covered entity and business associate

 

HHS Description and Commentary From the January 2013 Amendments
Uses and Disclosures: Organizational Requirements: Business Associate Contracts

 

Proposed Rule

Section 164.504(e) contains the specific requirements for business associate contracts and other arrangements. We proposed a number of modifications to § 164.504(e) to implement section 13404 of the HITECH Act and to reflect the Department’s new regulatory authority with respect to business associates, as well as to reflect a covered entity’s and business associate’s new obligations under Subpart D of Part 164 of the Privacy Rule to provide for notification in the case of breaches of unsecured protected health information. Section 164.504(e)(1)(ii) provides that a covered entity is not in compliance with the business associate requirements if the covered entity knew of a pattern of activity or practice of the business associate that constituted a material breach or violation of the business associate’s obligation under the contract or other arrangement, unless the covered entity took reasonable steps to cure the breach or end the violation, as applicable, and if such steps were unsuccessful, terminated the contract or arrangement or, if termination is not feasible, reported the problem to the Secretary. We proposed to remove the requirement that covered entities report to the Secretary when termination of a business associate agreement is not feasible. In light of a business associate’s direct liability for civil money penalties for certain violations of the business associate agreement and both a covered entity’s and business associate’s obligations under Subpart D to report breaches of unsecured protected health information to the Secretary, we have other mechanisms through which we expect to learn of such breaches and misuses of protected health information by a business associate.

We also proposed to add a new provision at § 164.504(e)(1)(iii) applicable to business associates with respect to subcontractors to mirror the requirements on covered entities at § 164.504(e)(1)(ii) (minus the requirement to report to the Secretary if termination of a contract is not feasible). Thus, a business associate that is aware of noncompliance by its business associate subcontractor would be required to respond to the situation in the same manner as a covered entity that is aware of noncompliance by its business associate. We believe this provision would implement section 13404(b) of the HITECH Act, and would align the requirements for business associates with regard to business associate subcontractors with the requirements for covered entities with regard to their business associates.

We also proposed changes to the specific business associate agreement provisions at § 164.504(e). First, we proposed to revise § 164.504(e)(2)(ii)(B) through (D) to provide that the contract will require that: in (B), business associates comply, where applicable, with the Security Rule with regard to electronic protected health information; in (C), business associates report breaches of unsecured protected health information to covered entities, as required by § 164.410; and in (D), in accordance with § 164.502(e)(1)(ii), business associates ensure that any subcontractors that create or receive protected health information on behalf of the business associate agree to the same restrictions and conditions that apply to the business associate with respect to such information. These revisions were proposed to align the requirements for the business associate agreement with the requirements in the HITECH Act and elsewhere within the HIPAA Rules.

Additionally, we proposed to add a new agreement provision at § 164.504(e)(2)(ii)(H) (and to renumber the current paragraphs (H) and (I) accordingly) to requires that, to the extent the business associate is to carry out a covered entity’s obligation under this subpart, the business associate must comply with the requirements of the Privacy Rule that apply to the covered entity in the performance of such obligation.

This provision would clarify that when a covered entity delegates a responsibility under the Privacy Rule to the business associate, the business associate would be contractually required to comply with the requirements of the Privacy Rule in the same manner as they apply to the covered entity. For example, if a third party administrator, as a business associate of a group health plan, fails to distribute the plan’s notice of privacy practices to participants on a timely basis, the third party administrator would not be directly liable under the HIPAA Rules, but would be contractually liable, for the failure. However, even though the business associate is not directly liable under the HIPAA Rules for failure to provide the notice, the covered entity remains directly liable for failure to provide the individuals with its notice of privacy practices because it is the covered entity’s ultimate responsibility to do so, despite its having hired a business associate to perform the function.

We also proposed to add a new § 164.504(e)(5) that would apply the requirements at § 164.504(e)(2) through (e)(4) to the contract or other arrangement between a business associate and its business associate subcontractor as required by § 164.502(e)(1)(ii) in the same manner as such requirements apply to contracts or other arrangements between a covered entity and its business associate.

Thus, a business associate would be required by § 164.502(e)(1)(ii) and by this section to enter into business associate agreements or other arrangements that comply with the Privacy and Security Rules with their business associate subcontractors, in the same manner that covered entities are required to enter into contracts or other arrangements with their business associates.

Finally, we proposed a few other minor changes. We proposed in § 164.504(e)(3) regarding other arrangements for governmental entities to include references to the Security Rule requirements for business associates to avoid having to repeat such provisions in the Security Rule. We also proposed to remove the reference to subcontractors in § 164.504(f)(2)(ii)(B) (regarding disclosures to plan sponsors) and in § 164.514(e)(4)(ii)(C)(4) (regarding data use agreements for limited data sets) to avoid confusion since the term “subcontractor” is now a defined term under the HIPAA Rules with a particular meaning that is related to business associates. The proposed removal of the term was not intended as a substantive change to the provisions.

Overview of Public Comments to Sections 164.502(e) and 164.504(e)

Several commenters expressed confusion regarding the need for business associate agreements, considering the provisions for direct liability from the HITECH Act and in the proposed rule. Many of these commenters suggested that all of the requirements of the Privacy Rule apply to business associates, as is the case with the Security Rule.

A few commenters requested clarification about what constitutes “satisfactory assurances” pursuant to the rule, asking whether, for example, there were expectations on covered entities to ensure that business associates (including subcontractors) have appropriate controls in place besides business associate agreements or whether a covered entity must obtain from a business associate satisfactory assurance that any business associate subcontractors are complying with the Rules. Several commenters requested clarification on the appropriateness of indemnification clauses in business associate agreements.

Finally, several commenters requested that the Department provide a model business associate agreement.

Final Rule: Sections 164.502(e) and 164.504(e)

The final rule adopts the proposed modifications to §§ 164.502(e) and 164.504(e).

As we discussed above, while section 13404 of the HITECH Act provides that business associates are now directly liable for civil money penalties under the HIPAA Privacy Rule for impermissible uses and disclosures and for the additional HITECH requirements in Subtitle D that are made applicable to covered entities, it does not apply all of the requirements of the Privacy Rule to business associates and thus, the final rule does not.

Therefore, business associates are not required to comply with other provisions of the Privacy Rule, such as providing a notice of privacy practices or designating a privacy official, unless the covered entity has chosen to delegate such a responsibility to the business associate, which would then make it a contractual requirement for which contractual liability would attach.

Concerning commenters’ questions about the continued need for business associate agreements given the new direct liability on business associates for compliance, we note that section 13404 of the HITECH Act expressly refers and ties business associate liability to making uses and disclosures in accordance with the uses and disclosures laid out in such agreements, rather than liability for compliance with the Privacy Rule generally. Further, section 13408 of the HITECH Act requires certain data transmission and personal health record vendors to have in place business associate agreements with the covered entities they serve. We also continue to believe that, despite the business associate’s direct liability for certain provisions of the HIPAA Rules, the business associate agreement is necessary to clarify and limit, as appropriate, the permissible uses and disclosures by the business associate, given the relationship between the parties and the activities or services being performed by the business associate. The business associate agreement is also necessary to ensure that the business associate is contractually required to perform certain activities for which direct liability does not attach (such as amending protected health information in accordance with § 164.526). In addition, the agreement represents an opportunity for the parties to clarify their respective responsibilities under the HIPAA Rules, such as by establishing how the business associate should handle a request for access to protected health information that it directly receives from an individual. Finally, the business associate agreement serves to notify the business associate of its status under the HIPAA Rules, so that it is fully aware of its obligations and potential liabilities.

With respect to questions about “satisfactory assurances,” § 164.502(e) provides that covered entities and business associates must obtain and document the “satisfactory assurances” of a business associate through a written contract or other agreement, such as a memorandum of understanding, with the business associate that meets the applicable requirements of § 164.504(e). As discussed above, § 164.504(e) specifies the provisions required in the written agreement between covered entities and business associates, including a requirement that a business associate ensure that any subcontractors agree to the same restrictions and conditions that apply to the business associate by providing similar satisfactory assurances. Beyond the required elements at § 164.504(e), as with any contracting relationship, business associates and covered entities may include other provisions or requirements that dictate and describe their business relationship, and that are outside the governance of the Privacy and Security Rules. These may or may not include additional assurances of compliance or indemnification clauses or other riskshifting provisions.

We also clarify with respect to the satisfactory assurances to be provided by subcontractors, that the agreement between a business associate and a business associate that is a subcontractor may not permit the subcontractor to use or disclose protected health information in a manner that would not be permissible if done by the business associate. For example, if a business associate agreement between a covered entity and a contractor does not permit the contractor to de-identify protected health information, then the business associate agreement between the contractor and a subcontractor (and the agreement between the subcontractor and another subcontractor) cannot permit the deidentification of protected health information. Such a use may be permissible if done by the covered entity, but is not permitted by the contractor or any subcontractors if it is not permitted by the covered entity’s business associate agreement with the contractor. In short, each agreement in the business associate chain must be as stringent or more stringent as the agreement above with respect to the permissible uses and disclosures.

Finally, in response to the comments requesting a model business associate agreement, we note that the Department has published sample business associate provisions on its web site. The sample language is designed to help covered entities comply with the business associate agreement requirements of the Privacy and Security Rules. However, use of these sample provisions is not required for compliance with the Rules, and the language should be amended as appropriate to reflect actual business arrangements between the covered entity and the business associate (or a business associate and a subcontractor).

Response to Other Public Comments: Sections 164.502(e) and 164.504(e)

Comment: Commenters requested guidance on whether a contract that complies with the requirements of the Graham Leach Bliley Act (GLBA) and incorporates the required elements of the HIPAA Rules may satisfy both sets of regulatory requirements.

The commenters urged the Department to permit a single agreement rather than requiring business associates and business associate subcontractors to enter into separate GLBA agreements and business associate agreements.

Response: While meeting the requirements of the GLBA does not satisfy the requirements of the HIPAA Rules, covered entities may use one agreement to satisfy the requirements of both the GLBA and the HIPAA Rules.

Comment: A few commenters recommended adding an exception to having a business associate agreement for a person that receives a limited dataset and executes a data use agreement for research, health care operations, or public health purposes.

Response: We have prior guidance that clarifies that if only a limited dataset is released to a business associate for a health care operations purpose, then a data use agreement suffices and a business associate agreement is not necessary. To make this clear in the regulation itself, we are adding to § 164.504(e)(3) a new paragraph (iv) that recognizes that a data use agreement may qualify as a business associate’s satisfactory assurance that it will appropriately safeguard the covered entity’s protected health information when the protected health information disclosed for a health care operations purpose is a limited data set. A similar provision is not necessary or appropriate for disclosures of limited data sets for research or public health purposes since such disclosures would not otherwise require business associate agreements.

Comment: A few commenters requested that the Department delete § 164.504(e)(2)(ii)(H), which provides that to the extent the business associate is to carry out a covered entity’s obligation under the HIPAA Rules, the business associate must comply with the requirements of the HIPAA Rules that apply to the covered entity in the performance of the obligation on behalf of the covered entity. Alternatively, commenters suggested that the Department clarify that the requirements of the section need not be included in business associate agreements and that this section does not limit the ability of covered entities and business associates to negotiate responsibilities with regard to other sections of the Privacy Rule.

Response: The Department declines to delete § 164.504(e)(2)(ii)(H). If a business associate contracts to provide services to the covered entity with regard to fulfilling individual rights or other obligations of the covered entity under the Privacy Rule, then the business associate agreement must require the business associate to fulfill such obligation in accordance with the Privacy Rule’s requirements. We do clarify, however, that if the covered entity does not delegate any of its responsibilities under the Privacy Rule to the business associate, then § 164.504(e)(2)(ii)(H) is not applicable and the parties are not required to include such language.

Comment: One commenter requested that the Department modify § 164.502(a)(4)(i) to permit business associates to use and disclose protected health information for their own health care operations purposes, and another commenter requested that the Department clarify whether § 164.504(e)(4) provides that a business associate may use or disclose protected health information as a covered entity would use or disclose the information.

Response: The Department declines to make the suggested modification.

Business associates do not have their own health care operations (see the definition of health care operations at § 164.501, which is limited to activities of the covered entity).

While a business associate does not have health care operations, it is permitted by § 164.504(e)(2)(i)(A) to use and disclose protected health information as necessary for its own management and administration if the business associate agreement permits such activities, or to carry out its legal responsibilities. Other than the exceptions for the business associate’s management and administration and for data aggregation services relating to the health care operations of the covered entity, the business associate may not use or disclose protected health information in a manner that would not be permissible if done by the covered entity (even if such a use or disclosure is permitted by the business associate agreement).

Comment: One commenter suggested requiring subcontractors to return or destroy all protected health information received from or created for a business associate when the contract with the business associate is terminated.

Response: The final rule at § 164.504(e)(5) does apply the requirements at § 164.504(e)(2) through (4) (which set forth the requirements for agreements between covered entities and their business associates) to agreements between business associates and their subcontractors. This includes § 164.504(e)(2)(ii)(J), which requires the business associate to return or destroy all protected health information received from, or created or received on behalf of, the covered entity at the termination of the contract, if feasible. When this requirement is applied to the agreement between the business associate and its business associate subcontractor, the effect is a contractual obligation for the business associate subcontractor to similarly return or destroy protected health information at the termination of the contract, if feasible.

Comment: One commenter suggested requiring a business associate to disclose all subcontractors of the business associate to a covered entity within thirty days of the covered entity’s request.

Response: The Department declines to adopt this suggestion as a requirement of the HIPAA Rules, because such a requirement would impose an undue disclosure burden on business associates. However, covered entities and business associates may include additional terms and conditions in their contracts beyond those required by § 164.504.

Comment: One commenter suggested establishing a certification process of business associates and subcontractors with regard to HIPAA compliance.

Response: The Department declines to establish or endorse a certification process for HIPAA compliance for business associates and subcontractors. Business associates and subcontractors are free to enlist the services of outside entities to assess their compliance with the HIPAA Rules and certification may be a useful compliance tool for entities, depending on the rigor of the program. However, certification does not guarantee compliance and therefore “certified” entities may still be subject to enforcement by OCR.

Comment: One commenter requested clarification on when it is not feasible for a business associate to terminate a contract with a subcontractor.

Response: Whether it is feasible for a business associate to terminate an agreement with a business associate subcontractor is a very fact-specific inquiry that must be examined on a case-by-case basis. For example, termination is not feasible for a business associate with regard to a subcontractor relationship where there are no other viable business alternatives for the business associate (when the subcontractor, for example, provides a unique service that is necessary for the business associate’s operations). See our prior guidance on this issue as it applies to covered entities and business associates in Frequently Asked Question #236, available at http://www.hhs.gov/ocr/privacy/hipaa/faq/business_associates/236.html.

 

Supplemental Comments and HHS Responses in the August 2002 Revisions
Uses and Disclosures: Organizational Requirements: Business Associate Contracts

 

Comment: Many commenters continued to recommend various modifications to the business associate standard, unrelated to the proposed modifications. For example, some commenters urged that the Department eliminate the business associate requirements entirely. Several commenters urged that the Department exempt covered entities from having to enter into contracts with business associates who are also covered entities under the Privacy Rule. Alternatively, one commenter suggested that the Department simplify the requirements by requiring a covered entity that is a business associate to specify in writing the uses and disclosures the covered entity is permitted to make as a business associate.

Other commenters requested that the Department allow business associates to self-certify or be certified by a third party or HHS as compliant with the Privacy Rule, as an alternative to the business associate contract requirement.

Certain commenters urged the Department to modify the Rule to eliminate the need for a contract with accreditation organizations. Some commenters suggested that the Department do so by reclassifying private accreditation organizations acting under authority from a government agency as health oversight organizations, rather than as business associates.

Response: The proposed modifications regarding business associates were intended to address the concerns of commenters with respect to having insufficient time to reopen and renegotiate what could be thousands of contracts for some covered entities by the compliance date of the Privacy Rule. The proposed modifications did not address changes to the definition of, or requirements for, business associates generally. The Department has, in previous guidance, as well as in the preamble to the December 2000 Privacy Rule, explained its position with respect to most of the above concerns. However, the Department summarizes its position in response to such comments briefly below.

The Department recognizes that most covered entities acquire the services of a variety of other persons or entities to assist in carrying covered entities’ health care activities. The business associate provisions are necessary to ensure that individually identifiable health information created or shared in the course of these relationships is protected. Further, without the business associate provisions, covered entities would be able to circumvent the requirements of the Privacy Rule simply by contracting out certain of its functions.

With respect to a contract between a covered entity and a business associate who is also a covered entity, the Department restates its position that a covered entity that is a business associate should be restricted from using or disclosing the protected health information it creates or receives as a business associate for any purposes other than those explicitly provided for in its contract. Further, to modify the provisions to require or permit a type of written assurance, other than a contract, by a covered entity would add unnecessary complexity to the Rule.

Additionally, the Department at this time does not believe that a business associate certification process would provide the same kind of protections and guarantees with respect to a business associate’s actions that are available to a covered entity through a contract under State law. With respect to certification by a third party, it is unclear whether such a process would allow for any meaningful enforcement (such as termination of a contract) for the actions of a business associate. Further, the Department could not require that a business associate be certified by a third party. Thus, the Privacy Rule still would have to allow for a contract between a covered entity and a business associate.

The Privacy Rule explicitly defines organizations that accredit covered entities as business associates. See the definition of “business associate” at § 160.103. The Department defined such organizations as business associates because, like other business associates, they provide a service to the covered entity during which much protected health information is shared. The Privacy Rule treats all organizations that provide accreditation services to covered entities alike. The Department has not been persuaded by the comments that those accreditation organizations acting under grant of authority from a government agency should be treated differently under the Rule and relieved of the conditions placed on other such relationships. However, the Department understands concerns regarding the burdens associated with the business associate contract requirements. The Department clarifies that the business associate provisions may be satisfied by standard or model contract forms which could require little or no modification for each covered entity. As an alternative to the business associate contract, these final modifications permit a covered entity to disclose a limited data set of protected health information, not including direct identifiers, for accreditation and other health care operations purposes subject to a data use agreement. See § 164.514(e).

Comment: A number of commenters continued to express concern over a covered entity’s perceived liability with respect to the actions of its business associate. Some commenters requested further clarification that a covered entity is not responsible for or required to monitor the actions of its business associates. It also was suggested that such language expressly be included in the Rule’s regulatory text. One commenter recommended that the Rule provide that business associates are directly liable for their own failure to comply with the Privacy Rule. Another commenter urged that the Department eliminate a covered entity’s obligation to mitigate any harmful effects caused by a business associate’s improper use or disclosure of protected health information.

Response: The Privacy Rule does not require a covered entity to actively monitor the actions of its business associates nor is the covered entity responsible or liable for the actions of its business associates. Rather, the Rule only requires that, where a covered entity knows of a pattern of activity or practice that constitutes a material breach or violation of the business associate’s obligations under the contract, the covered entity take steps to cure the breach or end the violation. See § 164.504(e)(1). The Department does not believe a regulatory modification is necessary in this area. The Department does not have the statutory authority to hold business associates, that are not also covered entities, liable under the Privacy Rule.

With respect to mitigation, the Department does not accept the commenter’s suggestion. When protected health information is used or disclosed inappropriately, the harm to the individual is the same, regardless of whether the violation was caused by the covered entity or a by business associate. Further, this provision is not an absolute standard intended to require active monitoring of the business associate or mitigation of all harm caused by the business associate. Rather, the provision applies only if the covered entity has actual knowledge of the harm, and requires mitigation only “to the extent practicable” by the covered entity. See § 164.530(f).

Comment: Several commenters asked the Department to provide additional clarification as to who is and is not a business associate for purposes of the Rule. For example, commenters questioned whether researchers were business associates. Other commenters requested further clarification as to when a health care provider would be the business associate of another health care provider. One commenter asked the Department to clarify whether covered entities that engage in joint activities under an organized health care arrangement (OHCA) are required to have a business associate contract. Several commenters asked the Department to clarify that a business associate agreement is not required with organizations or persons where contact with protected health information would result inadvertently (if at all), for example, janitorial services.

Response: The Department provides the following guidance in response to commenters. Disclosures from a covered entity to a researcher for research purposes as permitted by the Rule do not require a business associate contract. This remains true even in those instances where the covered entity has hired the researcher to perform research on the covered entity’s own behalf because research is not a covered function or activity. However, the Rule does not prohibit a covered entity from entering into a business associate contract with a researcher if the covered entity wishes to do so. Notwithstanding the above, a covered entity must enter into a data use agreement, as required by § 164.514(e), prior to disclosing a limited data set for research purposes to a researcher.

With respect to business associate contracts between health care providers, the Privacy Rule explicitly excepts from the business associate requirements disclosures by a covered entity to a health care provider for treatment purposes. See § 164.502(e)(1). Therefore, any covered health care provider (or other covered entity) may share protected health information with a health care provider for treatment purposes without a business associate contract. The Department does not intend the Rule to interfere with the sharing of information among health care providers for treatment. However, this exception does not preclude one health care provider from establishing a business associate relationship with another health care provider for some other purpose. For example, a hospital may enlist the services of another health care provider to assist in the hospital’s training of medical students. In this case, a business associate contract would be required before the hospital could allow the health care provider access to patient health information.

As to disclosures among covered entities who participate in an organized health care arrangement, the Department clarifies that no business associate contract is needed to the extent the disclosure relates to the joint activities of the OHCA.

The Department also clarifies that a business associate contract is not required with persons or organizations whose functions, activities, or services do not involve the use or disclosure of protected health information, and where any access to protected health information by such persons would be de minimus, if at all. For example, a health care provider is not required to enter into a business associate contract with its janitorial service because the performance of such service does not involve the use or disclosure of protected health information. In this case, where a janitor has contact with protected health information incidentally, such disclosure is permissible under § 164.502(a)(1)(iii) provided reasonable safeguards are in place.

The Department is aware that similar questions still remain with respect to the business associate provisions of the Privacy Rule and intends to provide technical assistance and further clarifications as necessary to address these questions.

Comment: A few commenters urged that the Department modify the Privacy Rule’s requirement for a covered entity to take reasonable steps to cure a breach or end a violation of its business associate contract by a business associate. One commenter recommended that the requirement be modified instead to require a covered entity who has knowledge of a breach to ask its business associate to cure the breach or end the violation. Another commenter argued that a covered entity only should be required to take reasonable steps to cure a breach or end a violation if the business associate or a patient reports to the privacy officer or other responsible employee of the covered entity that a misuse of protected health information has occurred.

Response: It is expected that a covered entity with evidence of a violation will ask its business associate, where appropriate, to cure the breach or end the violation. Further, the Department intends that whether a covered entity “knew” of a pattern or practice of the business associate in breach or violation of the contract will be consistent with common principles of law that dictate when knowledge can be attributed to a corporate entity. Regardless, a covered entity’s training of its workforce, as required by § 164.530(b), should address the recognition and reporting of violations to the appropriate responsible persons with the entity.

Comment: Several commenters requested clarification as to whether a business associate is required to provide individuals with access to their protected health information as provided by § 164.524 or an accounting of disclosures as provided by § 164.528, or amend protected health information as required by § 164.526. Some commenters wanted clarification that the access and amendment provisions apply to the business associate only if the business associate maintains the original designated record set of the protected health information.

Response: Under the Rule, the covered entity is responsible for fulfilling all of an individual’s rights, including the rights of access, amendment, and accounting, as provided for by '§ 164.524, 164.526, and 164.528. With limited exceptions, a covered entity is required to provide an individual access to his or her protected health information in a designated record set. This includes information in a designated record set of a business associate, unless the information held by the business associate merely duplicates the information maintained by the covered entity. However, the Privacy Rule does not prevent the parties from agreeing through the business associate contract that the business associate will provide access to individuals, as may be appropriate where the business associate is the only holder of the, or part of the, designated record set.

As governed by § 164.526, a covered entity must amend protected health information about an individual in a designated record set, including any designated record sets (or copies thereof) held by a business associate. Therefore, the Rule requires covered entities to specify in the business associate contract that the business associate will make protected health information available for amendment and will incorporate amendments accordingly. The covered entity itself is responsible for addressing requests from individuals for amendment and coordinating such requests with its business associate. However, the Privacy Rule also does not prevent the parties from agreeing through the contract that the business associate will receive and address requests for amendment on behalf of the covered entity.

With respect to accounting, § 164.528 requires a covered entity to provide an accounting of certain disclosures, including certain disclosures by its business associate, to the individual upon request. The business associate contract must provide that the business associate will make such information available to the covered entity in order for the covered entity to fulfill its obligation to the individual. As with access and amendment, the parties can agree through the business associate contract that the business associate will provide the accounting to individuals, as may be appropriate given the protected health information held by, and the functions of, the business associate.

Comment: One commenter asked whether a business associate agreement in electronic form, with an electronic signature, would satisfy the Privacy Rule’s business associate requirements.

Response: The Privacy Rule generally allows for electronic documents to qualify as written documents for purposes of meeting the Rule’s requirements. This also applies with respect to business associate agreements. However, currently, no standards exist under HIPAA for electronic signatures. Thus, in the absence of specific standards, covered entities should ensure any electronic signature used will result in a legally binding contract under applicable State or other law.

Comment: Certain commenters raised concerns with the Rule’s classification of attorneys as business associates. A few of these commenters urged the Department to clarify that the Rule’s requirement at § 164.504(e)(2)(ii)(H), which requires a contract to state the business associate must make information relating to the use or disclosure of protected health information available to the Secretary for purposes of determining the covered entity’s compliance with the Rule, not apply to protected health information in possession of a covered entity’s lawyer. Commenters argued that such a requirement threatens to impact attorney-client privilege. Others expressed concern over the requirement that the attorney, as a business associate, must return or destroy protected health information at termination of the contract. It was argued that such a requirement is inconsistent with many current obligations of legal counsel and is neither warranted nor useful.

Response: The Department does not modify the Rule in this regard. The Privacy Rule is not intended to interfere with attorney-client privilege. Nor does the Department anticipate that it will be necessary for the Secretary to have access to privileged material in order to resolve a complaint or investigate a violation of the Privacy Rule. However, the Department does not believe that it is appropriate to exempt attorneys from the business associate requirements.

With respect to the requirement for the return or destruction of protected health information, the Rule requires the return or destruction of all protected health information at termination of the contract only where feasible or permitted by law. Where such action is not feasible, the contract must state that the information will remain protected after the contract ends for as long as the information is maintained by the business associate, and that further uses and disclosures of the information will be limited to those purposes that make the return or destruction infeasible.

Comment: One commenter was concerned that the business associate provisions regarding the return or destruction of protected health information upon termination of the business associate agreement conflict with various provisions of the Bank Secrecy Act, which require financial institutions to retain certain records for up to five years. The commenter further noted that there are many State banking regulations that require financial institutions to retain certain records for up to ten years. The commenter recommended that the Department clarify, in instances of conflict with the Privacy Rule, that financial institutions comply with Federal and State banking regulations.

Response: The Department does not believe there is a conflict between the Privacy Rule and the Bank Secrecy Act retention requirements or that the Privacy Rule would prevent a financial institution that is a business associate of a covered entity from complying with the Bank Secrecy Act. The Privacy Rule generally requires a business associate contract to provide that the business associate will return or destroy protected health information upon the termination of the contract; however, it does not require this if the return or destruction of protected health information is infeasible. Return or destruction would be considered “infeasible” if other law, such as the Bank Secrecy Act, requires the business associate to retain protected health information for a period of time beyond the termination of the business associate contract. The Privacy Rule would require that the business associate contract extend the protections of the contract and limit further uses and disclosures to those purposes that make the return or destruction of the information infeasible. In this case, the business associate would have to limit the use or disclosure of the protected health information to purposes of the Bank Secrecy Act or State banking regulations.

Comment: A commenter requested clarification concerning the economic impact on business associates of the cost-based copying fees allowed to charged to individuals who request a copy of their medical record under the right of access provided by the Privacy Rule. See § 164.524. According to the commenter, many hospitals and other covered entities currently outsource their records reproduction function for fees that often include administrative costs over and above the costs of copying. In some cases, the fees may be set in accordance with State law. The Privacy Rule, at § 164.524(c)(4), however, permits only reasonable, cost-based copying fees to be charged to individuals seeking to obtain a copy of their medical record under their right of access. The commenter was concerned that others seeking copies of all or part of the medical record, such as payers, attorneys, or entities that have the individual’s authorization, would try to claim the limited copying fees provided in § 164.524(c)(4). The commenter asserted that such a result would drastically alter the economics of the outsourcing industry, driving outsourcing companies out of business, and raising costs for the health industry as a whole. A clarification that the fee structure in § 164.524(c)(4) applies only to individuals exercising their right of access was sought.

Response: The Department clarifies that the Rule, at § 164.524(c)(4), limits only the fees that may be charged to individuals, or to their personal representatives in accordance with § 164.502(g), when the request is to obtain a copy of protected health information about the individual in accordance with the right of access. The fee limitations in § 164.524(c)(4) do not apply to any other permissible disclosures by the covered entity, including disclosures that are permitted for treatment, payment or health care operations, disclosures that are based on an individual’s authorization that is valid under § 164.508, or other disclosures permitted without the individual’s authorization as specified in § 164.512.

The fee limitation in § 164.524(c)(4) is intended to assure that the right of access provided by the Privacy Rule is available to all individuals, and not just to those who can afford to do so. Based on the clarification provided, the Department does not anticipate that this provision will cause any significant disruption in the way that covered entities do business today. To the extent hospitals and other entities outsource this function because it is less expensive than doing it themselves, the fee limitation for individuals seeking access under § 164.524 will affect only a portion of this business; and, in these cases, hospitals should still find it economical to outsource these activities, even if they can only pass on a portion of the costs to the individual.

 

HHS Description from Original Rulemaking
Uses and Disclosures: Organizational Requirements: Business Associate Contracts

 

In the NPRM, we proposed to require a contract between a covered entity and a business associate, except for disclosures of protected health information by a covered entity that is a health care provider to another health care provider for the purposes of consultation or referral. A covered entity would have been in violation of this rule if the covered entity knew or reasonably should have known of a material breach of the contract by a business associate and it failed to take reasonable steps to cure the breach or terminate the contract. We proposed in the preamble that when a covered entity acted as a business associate to another covered entity, the covered entity that was acting as business associate also would have been responsible for any violations of the regulation.

We also proposed that covered health care providers receiving protected health information for consultation or referral purposes would still have been subject to this rule, and could not have used or disclosed such protected health information for a purpose other than the purpose for which it was received (i.e., the consultation or referral). Further, we noted that providers making disclosures for consultations or referrals should be careful to inform the receiving provider of any special limitations or conditions to which the disclosing provider had agreed to impose (e.g., the disclosing provider had provided notice to its patients that it would not make disclosures for research).

We proposed that business associates would not have been permitted to use or disclose protected health information in ways that would not have been permitted of the covered entity itself under these rules, and covered entities would have been required to take reasonable steps to ensure that protected health information disclosed to a business associate remained protected.

In the NPRM (proposed § 164.506(e)(2)) we would have required that the contractual agreement between a covered entity and a business associate be in writing and contain provisions that would:

 

  • Prohibit the business associate from further using or disclosing the protected health information for any purpose other than the purpose stated in the contract.

  • Prohibit the business associate from further using or disclosing the protected health information in a manner that would violate the requirements of this proposed rule if it were done by the covered entity.

  • Require the business associate to maintain safeguards as necessary to ensure that the protected health information is not used or disclosed except as provided by the contract.

  • Require the business associate to report to the covered entity any use or disclosure of the protected health information of which the business associate becomes aware that is not provided for in the contract.

  • Require the business associate to ensure that any subcontractors or agents to whom it provides protected health information received from the covered entity will agree to the same restrictions and conditions that apply to the business associate with respect to such information.

  • Require the business associate to provide access to non-duplicative protected health information to the subject of that information, in accordance with proposed § 164.514(a).

  • Require the business associate to make available its internal practices, books and records relating to the use and disclosure of protected health information received from the covered entity to the Secretary for the purposes of enforcing the provisions of this rule.

  • Require the business associate, at termination of the contract, to return or destroy all protected health information received from the covered entity that the business associate still maintains in any form to the covered entity and prohibit the business associate from retaining such protected health information in any form.

  • Require the business associate to incorporate any amendments or corrections to protected health information when notified by the covered entity that the information is inaccurate or incomplete.

  • State that individuals who are the subject of the protected health information disclosed are intended to be third party beneficiaries of the contract.

  • Authorize the covered entity to terminate the contract, if the covered entity determines that the business associate has violated a material term of the contract.

We also stated in the preamble to the NPRM that the contract could have included any additional arrangements that did not violate the provisions of this regulation.

We explained in the preamble to the NPRM that a business associate (including business associates that are covered entities) that had contracts with more than one covered entity would have had no authority to combine, aggregate or otherwise use for a single purpose protected health information obtained from more than one covered entity unless doing so would have been a lawful use or disclosure for each of the covered entities that supplied the protected health information that is being combined, aggregated or used. In addition, the business associate would have had to have been authorized through the contract or arrangement with each covered entity that supplied the protected health information to combine or aggregate the information. A covered entity would not have been permitted to obtain protected health information through a business associate that it could not otherwise obtain itself.

In the final rule we retain the overall approach proposed: covered entities may disclose protected health information to persons that meet the rule's definition of business associate, or hire such persons to obtain or create protected health information for them, only if covered entities obtain specified satisfactory assurances from the business associate that it will appropriately handle the information; the regulation specifies the elements of such satisfactory assurances; covered entities have responsibilities when such specified satisfactory assurances are violated by the business associate. We retain the requirement that specified satisfactory assurances must be obtained if a covered entity's business associate is also a covered entity. We note that a master business associate contract or MOU that otherwise meets the requirements regarding specified satisfactory assurances meets the requirements with respect to all the signatories.

A covered entity may disclose protected health information to a business associate, consistent with the other requirements of the final rule, as necessary to permit the business associate to perform functions and activities for or on behalf of the covered entity, or to provide the services specified in the business associate definition to or for the covered entity. As discussed below, a business associate may only use the protected health information it receives in its capacity as a business associate to a covered entity as permitted by its contract or agreement with the covered entity.

We do not attempt to directly regulate business associates, but pursuant to our authority to regulate covered entities we place restrictions on the flow of information from covered entities to non-covered entities. We add a provision to clarify that a violation of a business associate agreement by a covered entity that is a business associate of another covered entity constitutes a violation of this rule.

In the final rule, we make significant changes to the requirements regarding business associates. As explained below in more detail: we make significant changes to the content of the required contractual satisfactory assurances; we include exceptions for arrangements that would otherwise meet the definition of business associate; we make special provisions for government agencies that by law cannot enter into contracts with one another or that operate under other legal requirements incompatible with some aspects of the required contractual satisfactory assurances; we provide a new mechanism for covered entities to hire a third party to aggregate data.

The final rule provides several exceptions to the business associate requirements, where a business associate relationship would otherwise exist. We substantially expand the exception for disclosure of protected health information for treatment. Rather than allowing disclosures without business associate assurances only for the purpose of consultation or referral, in the final rule we allow covered entities to make any disclosure of protected health information for treatment purposes to a health care provider without a business associate arrangement. This provision includes all activities that fall under the definition of treatment.

We do not require a business associate contract for a group health plan to make disclosures to the plan sponsor, to the extent that the health plan meets the applicable requirements of § 164.504(f).

We also include an exception for certain jointly administered government programs providing public benefits. Where a health plan that is a government program provides public benefits, such as SCHIP and Medicaid, and where eligibility for, or enrollment in, the health plan is determined by an agency other than the agency administering the health plan, or where the protected health information used to determine enrollment or eligibility in the health plan is collected by an agency other than the agency administering the health plan, and the joint activities are authorized by law, no business associate contract is required with respect to the collection and sharing of individually identifiable health information for the performance of the authorized functions by the health plan and the agency other than the agency administering the health plan. We note that the phrase “government programs providing public benefits” refers to programs offering benefits to specified members of the public and not to programs that offer benefits only to employees or retirees of government agencies.

We note that we do not consider a financial institution to be acting on behalf of a covered entity, and therefore no business associate contract is required, when it processes consumer-conducted financial transactions by debit, credit or other payment card, clears checks, initiates or processes electronic funds transfers, or conducts any other activity that directly facilitates or effects the transfer of funds for compensation for health care. A typical consumer-conducted payment transaction is when a consumer pays for health care or health insurance premiums using a check or credit card. In these cases, the identity of the consumer is always included and some health information (e.g., diagnosis or procedure) may be implied through the name of the health care provider or health plan being paid. Covered entities that initiate such payment activities must meet the minimum necessary disclosure requirements described in the preamble to § 164.514.

In the final rule, we reduce the extent to which a covered entity must monitor the actions of its business associate and we make it easier for covered entities to identify the circumstances that will require them to take actions to correct a business associate's material violation of the contract, in the following ways. We delete the proposed language requiring covered entities to “take reasonable steps to ensure” that each business associate complies with the rule's requirements. Additionally, we now require covered entities to take reasonable steps to cure a breach or terminate the contract for business associate behaviors only if they know of a material violation by a business associate. In implementing this standard, we will view a covered entity that has substantial and credible evidence of a violation as knowing of such violation. While this standard relieves the covered entity of the need to actively monitor its business associates, a covered entity nonetheless is expected to investigate when they receive complaints or other information that contain substantial and credible evidence of violations by a business associate, and it must act upon any knowledge of such violation that it possesses. We note that a whistleblowing disclosure by a business associate of a covered entity that meets the requirements of § 164.502(j)(1) does not put the covered entity in violation of this rule, and the covered entity has no duty to correct or cure, or to terminate the relationship.

We also qualify the requirement for terminating contracts with non-compliant business associates. The final rule still requires that the business associate contract authorize the covered entity to terminate the contract, if the covered entity determines that the business associate has violated a material term of the contract, and it requires the covered entity to terminate the contract if steps to cure such a material breach fail. The rule now stipulates, however, that if the covered entity is unable to cure a material breach of the business associate's obligation under the contract, it is expected to terminate the contract, when feasible. This qualification has been added to accommodate circumstances where terminating the contract would be unreasonably burdensome on the covered entity, such as when there are no viable alternatives to continuing a contract with that particular business associate. It does not mean, for instance, that the covered entity can choose to continue the contract with a non-compliant business associate merely because it is more convenient or less costly than contracts with other potential business associates. We also require that if a covered entity determines that it is not feasible to terminate a non-compliant business associate, the covered entity must notify the Secretary.

We retain all of the requirements for a business associate contract that were listed in proposed § 164.506(e)(2), with some modifications. See § 164.504(e)(2).

We retain the requirement that the business associate contract must provide that the business associate will not use or further disclose the information other than as permitted or required by the contract or as required by law. We do not mean by this requirement that the business associate contract must specify each and every use and disclosure of protected health information permitted to the business associate. Rather, the contract must state the purposes for which the business associate may use and disclose protected health information, and must indicate generally the reasons and types of persons to whom the business associate may make further disclosures. For example, attorneys often need to provide information to potential witnesses, opposing counsel, and others in the course of their representation of a client. The business associate contract pursuant to which protected health information is provided to its attorney may include a general statement permitting the attorney to disclose protected health information to these types of people, within the scope of its representation of the covered entity.

We retain the requirement that a business associate contract may not authorize a business associate to use or further disclose protected health information in a manner that would violate the requirements of this subpart if done by the covered entity, but we add two exceptions. First, we permit a covered entity to authorize a business associate to use and disclose protected health information it receives in its capacity as a business associate for its proper management and administration and to carry out its legal responsibilities. The contract must limit further disclosures of the protected health information for these purposes to those that are required by law and to those for which the business associate obtains reasonable assurances that the protected health information will be held confidentially and that it will be notified by the person to whom it discloses the protected health information of any breaches of confidentiality.

Second, we permit a covered entity to authorize the business associate to provide data aggregation services to the covered entity. As discussed above in § 164.501, data aggregation, with respect to protected health information received by a business associate in its capacity as the business associate of a covered entity, is the combining of such protected health information by the business associate with protected health information received by the business associate in its capacity as a business associate of another covered entity, to permit the creation of data for analyses that relate to the health care operations of the respective covered entities. We added this service to the business associate definition to clarify the ability of covered entities to contract with business associates to undertake quality assurance and comparative analyses that involve the protected health information of more than one contracting covered entity. We except data aggregation from the general requirement that a business associate contract may not authorize a business associate to use or further disclose protected health information in a manner that would violate the requirements of this subpart if done by the covered entity in order to permit the combining or aggregation of protected health information received in its capacity as a business associate of different covered entities when it is performing this service. In many cases, the combining of this information for the respective health care operations of the covered entities is not something that the covered entities could do - a covered entity cannot generally disclose protected health information to another covered entity for the disclosing covered entity's health care operations. However, we permit covered entities that enter into business associate contracts with a business associate for data aggregation to permit the business associate to combine or aggregate the protected health information they disclose to the business associate for their respective health care operations.

We note that there may be other instances in which a business associate may combine or aggregate protected health information received in its capacity as a business associate of different covered entities, such as when it is performing health care operations on behalf of covered entities that participate in an organized health care arrangement. A business associate that is performing payment functions on behalf of different covered entities also may combine protected health information when it is necessary, such as when the covered entities share financial risk or otherwise jointly bill for services.

In the final rule we clarify that the business associate contract must require the business associate to make available protected health information for amendment and to incorporate such amendments. The business associate contract must also require the business associate to make available the information required to provide an accounting of disclosures. We provide more flexibility to the requirement that all protected health information be returned by the business associate upon termination of the contract. The rule now stipulates that if feasible, the protected health information should be destroyed or returned at the end of a contract. Accordingly, a contract with a business associate must state that if there are reasons that the return or destruction of the information is not feasible and the information must be retained for specific reasons and uses, such as for future audits, privacy protections must continue after the contract ends, for as long as the business associate retains the information. The contract also must state that the uses of information after termination of the contract must be limited to the specific set of uses or disclosures that make it necessary for the business associate to retain the information.

We also remove the requirement that business associate contracts contain a provision stating that individuals whose protected health information is disclosed under the contract are intended third-party beneficiaries of the contract. Third party beneficiary or similar responsibilities may arise under these business associate arrangements by operation of state law; we do not intend in this rule to affect the operation of such state laws.

We modify the requirement that a business associate contract require the business associate to ensure that agents abide by the provisions of the business associate contract. We clarify that agents includes subcontractors, and we note that a business associate contract must make the business associate responsible for ensuring that any person to whom it delegates a function, activity or service which is within its business associate contract with the covered entity agrees to abide by the restrictions and conditions that apply to the business associate under the contract. We note that a business associate will need to consider the purpose for which protected health information is being disclosed in determining whether the recipient must be bound to the restrictions and conditions of the business associate contract. When the disclosure is a delegation of a function, activity or service that the business associate has agreed to perform for a covered entity, the recipient who undertakes such a function steps into the shoes of the business associate and must be bound to the restrictions and conditions. When the disclosure is to a third party who is not performing business associate functions, activities or services for on behalf of the covered entity, but is the type of disclosure that the covered entity itself could make without giving rise to a business associate relationship, the business associate is not required to ensure that the restrictions or conditions of the business associate contract are maintained.

For example, if a business associate acts as the billing agent of a health care provider, and discloses protected health information on behalf of the hospital to health plans, the business associate has no responsibility with respect to further uses or disclosures by the health plan. In the example above, where a covered entity has a business associate contract with a lawyer, and the lawyer discloses protected health information to an expert witness in preparation for litigation, the lawyer again would have no responsibility under this subpart with respect to uses or disclosures by the expert witness, because such witness is not undertaking the functions, activities or services that the business associate lawyer has agreed to perform. However, if a covered entity contracts with a third party administrator to provide claims management, and the administrator delegates management of the pharmacy benefits to a third party, the business associate third party administrator must ensure that the pharmacy manager abides by the restrictions and conditions in the business associate contract between the covered entity and the third party administrator.

We provide in § 164.504(c)(3) several methods other than a business associate contract that will satisfy the requirement for satisfactory assurances under this section. First, when a government agency is a business associate of another government agency that is a covered entity, we permit memorandum of understanding between the agencies to constitute satisfactory assurance for the purposes of this rule, if the memorandum accomplishes each of the objectives of the business associate contract. We recognize that the relationships of government agencies are often organized as a matter of law, and that it is not always feasible for one agency to contract with another for all of the purposes provided for in this section. We also recognize that it may be incorrect to view one government agency as 'acting on behalf of” the other government agency; under law, each agency may be acting to fulfill a statutory mission. We note that in some instances, it may not be possible for the agencies to include the right to terminate the arrangement because the relationship may be established under law. In such instances, the covered entity government agency would need to fulfill the requirement to report known violations of the memorandum to the Secretary.

Where the covered entity is a government agency, we consider the satisfactory assurances requirement to be satisfied if other law contains requirements applicable to the business associate that accomplish each of the objectives of the business associate contract. We recognize that in some cases, covered entities that are government agencies may be able to impose the requirements of this section directly on the persons acting as their business associates. We also recognize that often one government agency is acting as a business associate of another government agency, and either party may have the legal authority to establish the requirements of this section by regulation. We believe that imposing these requirements directly on business associates provides greater protection than we can otherwise provide under this section, and so we recognize such other laws as sufficient to substitute for a business associate contract.

We also recognize that there may be some circumstances where the relationship between covered entities and business associates is otherwise mandated by law. In the final rule, we provide that where a business associate is required by law to act as a business associate to a covered entity, the covered entity may disclose protected health information to the business associate to the extent necessary to comply with the legal mandate without meeting the requirement to have a business associate contract (or, in the case of government agencies, a memorandum of understanding or law pertaining to the business associate) if it makes a good faith attempt the obtain satisfactory assurances required by this section and, if unable to do so, documents the attempt and the reasons that such assurances cannot be obtained. This provision addresses situations where law requires one party to act as the business associate of another party. The fact that the parties have contractual obligations that may be enforceable is not sufficient to meet the required by law test in this provision.

This provision recognizes that in some instances the law requires that a government agency act as a business associate of a covered entity. For example, the United States Department of Justice is required by law to defend tort suits brought against certain covered entities; in such circumstances, however, the United States, and not the individual covered entity, is the client and is potentially liable. In such situations, covered entities must be able to disclose protected health information needed to carry out the representation, but the particular requirements that would otherwise apply to a business associate relationship may not be possible to obtain. Subsection (iii) makes clear that, where the relationship is required by law, the covered entity complies with the rule if it attempts, in good faith, to obtain satisfactory assurances as are required by this paragraph and, if such attempt fails, documents the attempts and the reasons that such assurances cannot be obtained.

The operation of the final rule maintains the construction discussed in the preamble to the NPRM that a business associate (including a business associate that is a covered entity) that has business associate contracts with more than one covered entity generally may not use or disclose the protected health information that it creates or receives in its capacity as a business associate of one covered entity for the purposes of carrying out its responsibilities as a business associate of another covered entity, unless doing so would be a lawful use or disclosure for each of the covered entities and the business associate's contract with each of the covered entities permits the business associate to undertake the activity. For example, a business associate performing a function under health care operations on behalf of an organized health care arrangement would be permitted to combine or aggregate the protected health information obtained from covered entities participating in the arrangement to the extent necessary to carry out the authorized activity and in conformance with its business associate contracts. As described above, a business associate providing data aggregation services to different covered entities also could combine and use the protected health information of the covered entities to assist with their respective health care operations. A covered entity that is undertaking payment activities on behalf of different covered entities also may use or disclose protected health information obtained as a business associate of one covered entity when undertaking such activities as a business associate of another covered entity where the covered entities have authorized the activities and where they are necessary to secure payment for the entities. For example, when a group of providers share financial risk and contract with a business associate to conduct payment activities on their behalf, the business associate may use the protected health information received from the covered entities to assist them in managing their shared risk arrangement.

Finally, we note that the requirements imposed by this provision are intended to extend privacy protection to situations in which a covered entity discloses substantial amounts of protected health information to other persons so that those persons can perform functions or activities on its behalf or deliver specified services to it. A business associate contract basically requires the business associate to maintain the confidentiality of the protected health information that it receives and generally to use and disclose such information for the purposes for which it was provided. This requirement does not interfere with the relationship between a covered entity and business associate, or require the business associate to subordinate its professional judgment to that of a covered entity. Covered entities may rely on the professional judgment of their business associates as to the type and amount of protected health information that is necessary to carry out a permitted activity. The requirements of this provision are aimed at securing the continued confidentiality of protected health information disclosed to third parties that are serving the covered entity's interests.

 

HHS Response to Comments Received from Original Rulemaking
Business Associate Contracts

 

Comment: Many commenters generally opposed the business partner standard and questioned the Secretary's legal authority under section 1172(a) of HIPAA to require business partner contracts. Others stated that the proposed rule imposed too great a burden on covered entities with regard to monitoring their business partners' actions. Commenters stated that they did not have the expertise to adequately supervise their business partners' activities - including billing, accounting, and legal activities - to ensure that protected health information is not inappropriately disclosed. Commenters argued that business partners are not “under the control” of health care providers, and that the rule would significantly increase the cost of medical care. Many commenters stated that the business partner provisions would be very time consuming and expensive to implement, noting that it is not unusual for a health plan or hospital to have hundreds of business partners, especially if independent physicians and local pharmacies are considered business partners. Many physician groups pointed out that their business partners are large providers, hospitals, national drug supplier and medical equipment companies, and asserted that it would be impossible, or very expensive, for a small physician group to attempt to monitor the activity of large national companies. Commenters stated that complex contract terms and new obligations would necessitate the investment of significant time and resources by medical and legal personnel, resulting in substantial expenses. Many commenters proposed that the duty to monitor be reduced to a duty to terminate the contractual arrangement upon discovery of a failure to comply with the privacy requirements.

In addition, many commenters argued that covered entities should have less responsibility for business partners' actions regarding the use and disclosure of protected health information. The proposed rule would have held covered entities responsible for the actions of their business partners when they “knew or reasonably should have known” of improper use of protected health information and failed to take reasonable steps to cure a breach of the business partner contract or terminate the contract. Many commenters urged that the term “knew or should have known” be clearly defined, with examples. Some commenters stated that covered entities should be liable only when they have actual knowledge of the material breach of the privacy rules by the business partner. Others recommended creation of a process by which a business partner could seek advice to determine if a particular disclosure would be appropriate. Some commenters stated that, in order to create an environment that would encourage covered entities to report misuses of protected health information, a covered entity should not be punished if it discovered an inappropriate disclosure.

Response: With regard to our authority to require business associate contracts, we clarify that Congress gave the Department explicit authority to regulate what uses and disclosures of protected health information by covered entities are “authorized.” If covered entities were able to circumvent the requirements of these rules by the simple expedient of contracting out the performance of various functions, these rules would afford no protection to individually identifiable health information and be rendered meaningless. It is thus reasonable to place restrictions on disclosures to business associates that are designed to ensure that the personal medical information disclosed to them continues to be protected and used and further disclosed only for appropriate (i.e., permitted or required) purposes.

We do not agree that business associate contracts would necessarily have complex terms or result in significant time and resource burdens. The implementation specifications for business associate contracts set forth in § 164.504 are straightforward and clear. Nothing prohibits covered entities from having standard contract forms which could require little or no modification for many business associates.

In response to comments that the “knew or should have known” standard in the proposed rule was too vague or difficult to apply, and concerns that we were asking too much of small entities in monitoring the activities of much larger business associates, we have changed the rule. Under the final rule, we put responsibility on the covered entity to take action when it “knew of a pattern of activity or practice of the business associate that constituted, respectively, a material breach or violation of the business associate's obligation under the contract...” This will preclude confusion about what a covered entity 'should have known.' We interpret the term “knew” to include the situation where the covered entity has credible evidence of a violation. Covered entities cannot avoid responsibility by intentionally ignoring problems with their contractors. In addition, we have eliminated the requirement that a covered entity actively monitor and ensure protection by its business associates. However, a covered entity must investigate credible evidence of a violation by a business associate and act upon any such knowledge.

In response to the concern that the covered entity should not be punished if it discovers an inappropriate disclosure by its business associate, § 164.504(e) provides that the covered entity is not in compliance with the rule if it fails to take reasonable steps to cure the breach or end the violation, while § 164.530(f) requires the covered entity to mitigate, to the extent practicable, any resultant harm. The breach itself does not cause a violation of this rule.

Comment: Some commenters voiced support for the concept of business partners. Moreover, some commenters urged that the rule apply directly to those entities that act as business partners, by restricting disclosures of protected health information after a covered entity has disclosed it to a business partner.

Response: We are pleased that commenters supported the business associate standard and we agree that there are advantages to legislation that directly regulates most entities that use or disclose protected health information. However, we reiterate that our jurisdiction under the statute limits us to regulate only those covered entities listed in § 160.102.

Comment: Many commenters strongly opposed the provision in the proposed rule requiring business partner contracts to state that individuals whose protected health information is disclosed under the contract are intended third party beneficiaries of the contract. Many noted that HIPAA did not create a private right of action for individuals to enforce a right to privacy of medical information, and questioned the Secretary's authority to create such a right through regulation. Others questioned whether the creation of such a right was appropriate in light of the inability of Congress to reach consensus on the question, and perceived the provision as a “back door” attempt to create a right that Congress did not provide. Some commenters noted that third party beneficiary law varies from state to state, and that a third party beneficiary provision may be unenforceable in some states. These commenters suggested that the complexity and variation of state third party beneficiary law would increase cost and confusion with limited privacy benefits.

Commenters predicted that the provision would result in a dramatic increase in frivolous litigation, increased costs throughout the health care system, and a chilling effect on the willingness of entities to make authorized disclosures of protected information. Many commenters predicted that fear of lawsuits by individuals would impede the flow of communications necessary for the smooth operation of the health care system, ultimately affecting quality of care. For example, some predicted that the provision would inhibit providers from making authorized disclosures that would improve care and reduce medical errors. Others predicted that it would limit vendors' willingness to support information systems requirements. One large employer stated that the provision would create a substantial disincentive for employers to sponsor group health plans. Another commenter noted that the provision creates an anomaly in that individuals may have greater recourse against business partners and covered entities that contract with them than against covered entities acting alone.

However, some commenters strongly supported the concept of providing individuals with a mechanism to enforce the provisions of the rule, and considered the provision among the most important privacy protections in the proposed rule.

Response: We eliminate the requirement that business associate contracts contain a provision stating that individuals whose protected health information is disclosed under the contract are intended third-party beneficiaries of the contract.

We do not intend this change to affect existing laws regarding when individuals may be third party beneficiaries of contracts. If existing law allows individuals to claim third party beneficiary rights, or prohibits them from doing so, we do not intend to affect those rules. Rather, we intend to leave this matter to such other law.

Comment: Some commenters objected to the proposed rule's requirement that the business partner must return or destroy all protected health information received from the covered entity at the termination of the business partner contract. Commenters argued that business partners will need to maintain business records for legal and/or financial auditing purposes, which would preclude the return or destruction of the information. Moreover, they argued that computer back-up files may contain protected health information, but business partners cannot be expected to destroy entire electronic back-up files just because part of the information that they contain is from a client for whom they have completed work.

Response: We modify the proposed requirement that the business associate must return or destroy all protected health information received from the covered entity when the business associate contract is terminated. Under the final rule, a business associate must return or destroy all protected health information when the contract is terminated if feasible and lawful. The business partner contract must state that privacy protections continue after the contract ends, if there is a need for the business associate to retain any of the protected health information and for as long as the information is retained. In addition, the permissible uses of information after termination of the contract must be limited to those activities that make return or destruction of the information not feasible.

Comment: Many commenters recommended that providers and plans be excluded from the definition of “business partner” if they are already governed by the rule as covered entities. Providers expressed particular concern about the inclusion of physicians with hospital privileges as business partners of the hospital, as each hospital would be required to have written contracts with and monitor the privacy practices of each physician with privileges, and each physician would be required to do the same for the hospital. Another commenter argued that consultations between covered entities for treatment or referral purposes should not be subject to the business partner contracting requirement.

Response: The final rule retains the general requirement that, subject to the exceptions below, a covered entity must enter into a business associate contract with another covered entity when one is providing services to or acting on behalf of the other. We retain this requirement because we believe that a covered entity that is a business associate should be restricted from using or disclosing the protected health information it creates or receives through its business associate function for any purposes other than those that are explicitly detailed in its contract.

However, the final rule expands the proposed exception for disclosures of protected health information by a covered health care provider to another health care provider. The final rule allows such disclosures without a business associate contract for any activities that fall under the definition of “treatment.” We agree with the commenter that the administrative burdens of requiring contracts in staff privileges arrangements would not be outweighed by any potential privacy enhancements from such a requirement. Although the exception for disclosure of protected health information for treatment could be sufficient to relieve physicians and hospitals of the contract requirement, we also believe that this arrangement does not meet the true meaning of “business associate,” because both the hospital and physician are providing services to the patient, not to each other. We therefore also add an exception to § 164.502(e)(1) that explicitly states that a contract is not required when the association involves a health care facility and another health care provider with privileges at that facility, if the purpose is providing health care to the individual. We have also added other exceptions in § 164.502(e)(1)(ii) to the requirement to obtain “satisfactory assurances” under § 164.502(e)(1)(i). We do not require a business associate arrangement between group health plans and their plan sponsors because other, albeit analogous, requirements apply under § 164.504(f) that are more tailored to the specifics of that legal relationship. We do not require business associate arrangements between government health plans providing public benefits and other agencies conducting certain functions for the health plan, because these arrangements are typically very constrained by other law.

Comment: Many commenters expressed concern that required contracts for federal agencies would adversely affect oversight activities, including investigations and audits. Some health plan commenters were concerned that if HMOs are business partners of an employer then the employer would have a right to all personal health information collected by the HMO. A commenter wanted to be sure that authorization would not be required for accreditation agencies to access information. A large manufacturing company wanted to make sure that business associate contracts were not required between affiliates and a parent corporation that provides administrative services for a sponsored health plan. Attorney commenters asserted that a business partner contract would undermine the attorney/client relationship, interfere with attorney/client privilege, and was not necessary to protect client confidences. A software vendor wanted to be excluded because the requirements for contracts were burdensome and government oversight intrusive. Some argued that because the primary purpose of medical device manufacturers is supplying devices, not patient care, they should be excluded.

Response: We clarify in the above discussion of the definition of “business associate” that a health insurance issuer or an HMO providing health insurance or health coverage to a group health plan does not become a business associate simply by providing health insurance or health coverage. The health insurance issuer or HMO may perform additional functions or activities or provide additional services, however, that would give rise to a business associate relationship. However, even when an health insurance issuer or HMO acts as a business associate of a group health plan, the group health plan has no right of access to the other protected health information maintained by the health insurance issuer or HMO. The business associate contract must constrain the uses and disclosures of protected health information obtained by the business associate through the relationship, but does not give the covered entity any right to request the business associate to disclose protected health information that it maintains outside of the business associate relationship to the group health plan. Under HIPAA, employers are not covered entities, so a health insurance issuer or HMO cannot act as a business associate of an employer. See § 164.504(f) with respect to disclosures to plan sponsors from a group health plan or health insurance issuer or HMO with respect to a group health plan.

With respect to attorneys generally, the reasons the commenters put forward to exempt attorneys from this requirement were not persuasive. The business associate requirements will not prevent attorneys from disclosing protected health information as necessary to find and prepare witness, nor from doing their work generally, because the business associate contract can allow disclosures for these purposes. We do not require business associate contracts to identify each disclosure to be made by the business associate; these disclosures can be identified by type or purpose. We believe covered entities and their attorneys can craft agreements that will allow for uses and disclosures of protected health information as necessary for these activities. The requirement for a business associate contract does not interfere with the attorney-client relationship, nor does it override professional judgment of business associates regarding the protected health information they need to discharge their responsibilities. We do not require covered entities to second guess their professional business associates' reasonable requests to use or disclose protected health information in the course of the relationship.

The attorney-client privilege covers only a small portion of information provided to attorneys and so is not a substitute for this requirement. More important, attorney-client privilege belongs to the client, in this case the covered entity, and not to the individual who is the subject of the information. The business associate requirements are intended to protect the subject of the information.

With regard to government attorneys and other government agencies, we recognize that federal and other law often does not allow standard legal contracts among governmental entities, but instead requires agreements to be made through the Economy Act or other mechanisms; these are generally reflected in a memorandum of understanding (MOU). We therefore modify the proposed requirements to allow government agencies to meet the required “satisfactory assurance” through such MOUs that contain the same provisions required of business associate contracts. As discussed elsewhere, we believe that direct regulation of entities receiving protected health information can be as or more effective in protecting health information as contracts. We therefore also allow government agencies to meet the required “satisfactory assurances” if law or regulations impose requirements on business associates consistent with the requirements specified for business associate contracts.

We do not believe that the requirement to have a business associate contract with agencies that are performing the specified services for the covered entity or undertaking functions or activities on its behalf undermines the government functions being performed. A business associate arrangement requires the business associate to maintain the confidentiality of the protected health information and generally to use and disclose the information only for the purposes for which it was provided. This does not undermine government functions. We have exempted from the business associate requirement certain situations in which the law has created joint uses or custody over health information, such as when law requires another government agency to determine the eligibility for enrollment in a covered health plan. In such cases, information is generally shared across a number of government programs to determine eligibility, and often is jointly maintained. We also clarify that health oversight activities do not give rise to a business associate relationship, and that protected health information may be disclosed by a covered entity to a health oversight agency pursuant to § 164.512(d).

We clarify for purposes of the final rule that accreditation agencies are business associates of a covered entity and are explicitly included within the definition. During accreditation, covered entities disclose substantial amounts of protected health information to other private persons. A business associate contract basically requires the business associate to maintain the confidentiality of the protected health information that it receives and generally to use and disclose such information for the purposes for which it was provided. As with attorneys, we believe that requiring a business associate contract in this instance provides substantial additional privacy protection without interfering with the functions that are being provided by the business associate.

With regard to affiliates, § 164.504(d) permits affiliates to designate themselves as a single covered entity for purposes of this rule. (See § 164.504(d) for specific organizational requirements.) Affiliates that choose to designate themselves as a single covered entity for purposes of this rule will not need business associate contracts to share protected health information. Absent such designation, affiliates are business associates of the covered entity if they perform a function or service for the covered entity that necessitates the use or disclosure of protected health information.

Software vendors are business associates if they perform functions or activities on behalf of, or provide specified services to, a covered entity. The mere provision of software to a covered entity would not appear to give rise to a business associate relationship, although if the vendor needs access to the protected health information of the covered entity to assist with data management or to perform functions or activities on the covered entity's behalf, the vendor would be a business associate. We note that when an employee of a contractor, like a software or IT vendor, has his or her primary duty station on-site at a covered entity, the covered entity may choose to treat the employee of the vendor as a member of the covered entity's workforce, rather than as a business associate. See the preamble discussion to the definition of workforce, § 160.103.

With regard to medical device manufacturers, we clarify that a device manufacturer that provides “health care” consistent with the rule's definition, including being a “supplier” under the Medicare program, is a health care provider under the final rule. We do not require a business associate contract when protected health information is shared among health care providers for treatment purposes. However, a device manufacturer that does not provide “health care” must be a business associate of a covered entity if that manufacturer receives or creates protected health information in the performance of functions or activities on behalf of, or the provision of specified services to, a covered entity.

As to financial institutions, they are business associates under this rule when they conduct activities that cause them to meet the definition of business associate. See the preamble discussion of the definition of “payment” in § 164.501, for an explanation of activities of a financial institution that do not require it to have a business associated contract.

Disease managers may be health care providers or health plans, if they otherwise meet the respective definitions and perform disease management activities on their own behalf. However, such persons may also be business associates if they perform disease management functions or services for a covered entity.

Comment: Other commenters recommended that certain entities be included within the definition of “business partner,” such as transcription services; employee representatives; in vitro diagnostic manufacturers; private state and comparative health data organizations; state hospital associations; warehouses; “whistleblowers,” credit card companies that deal with health billing; and patients.

Response: We do not list all the types of entities that are business associates, because whether an entity is a business associate depends on what the entity does, not what the entity is. That is, this is a definition based on function; any entity performing the function described in the definition is a business associate. Using one of the commenters' examples, a state hospital association may be a business associate if it performs a service for a covered entity for which protected health information is required. It is not a business associate by virtue of the fact that it is a hospital association, but by virtue of the service it is performing.

Comment: A few commenters urged that certain entities, i.e., collection agencies and case managers, be business partners rather than covered entities for purposes of this rule.

Response: Collection agencies and case managers are business associates to the extent that they provide specified services to or perform functions or activities on behalf of a covered entity. A collection agency is not a covered entity for purposes of this rule. However, a case manager may be a covered entity because, depending on the case manager's activities, the person may meet the definition of either a health care provider or a health plan. See definitions of “health care provider” and “health plan” in § 164.501.

Comment: Several commenters complained that the proposed HIPAA security regulation and privacy regulation were inconsistent with regard to business partners.

Response: We will conform these policies in the final Security Rule.

Comment: One commenter expressed concern that the proposal appeared to give covered entities the power to limit by contract the ability of their business partners to disclose protected health information obtained from the covered entity regardless of whether the disclosure was permitted under proposed § 164.510, “Uses and disclosures for which individual authorization is not required” (§ 164.512 in the final rule). Therefore, the commenter argued that the covered entity could prevent the business partner from disclosing protected health information to oversight agencies or law enforcement by omitting them from the authorized disclosures in the contract.

In addition, the commenter expressed concern that the proposal did not authorize business partners and their employees to engage in whistleblowing. The commenter concluded that this omission was unintended since the proposal's provision at proposed § 164.518(c)(4) relieved the covered entity, covered entity's employees, business partner, and the business partner's employees from liability for disclosing protected health information to law enforcement and to health oversight agencies when reporting improper activities, but failed to specifically authorize business partners and their employees to engage in whistleblowing in proposed § 164.510(f), “Disclosures for law enforcement.”

Response: Under our statutory authority, we cannot directly regulate entities that are not covered entities; thus, we cannot regulate most business associates, or 'authorize' them to use or disclose protected health information. We agree with the result sought by the commenter, and accomplish it by ensuring that such whistle blowing disclosures by business associates and others do not constitute a violation of this rule on the part of the covered entity.

Comment: Some commenters suggested that the need to terminate contracts that had been breached would be particularly problematic when the contracts were with single-source business partners used by health care providers. For example, one commenter explained that when the Department awards single-source contracts, such as to a Medicare carrier acting as a fiscal intermediary that then becomes a business partner of a health care provider, the physician is left with no viable alternative if required to terminate the contract.

Response: In most cases, we expect that there will be other entities that could be retained by the covered entity as a business associate to carry out those functions on its behalf or provide the necessary services. We agree that under certain circumstances, however, it may not be possible for a covered entity to terminate a contract with a business associate. Accordingly, although the rule still generally requires a covered entity to terminate a contract if steps to cure such a material breach fail, it also allows an exception to this to accommodate those infrequent circumstances where there simply are no viable alternatives to continuing a contract with that particular business associate. It does not mean, however, that the covered entity can choose to continue the contract with a non-compliant business associate merely because it is more convenient or less costly than doing business with other potential business associates. We also require that if a covered entity determines that it is not feasible to terminate a non-compliant business associate, the covered entity must notify the Secretary.

Comment: Another commenter argued that having to renegotiate every existing contract within the 2-year implementation window so a covered entity can attest to “satisfactory assurance” that its business partner will appropriately safeguard protected health information is not practical.

Response: The 2-year implementation period is statutorily required under section 1175(b) of the Act. Further, we believe that two years provides adequate time to come into compliance with the regulation.

Comment: A commenter recommended that the business partner contract specifically address the issue of data mining because of its increasing prevalence within and outside the health care industry.

Response: We agree that protected health information should only be used by business associates for the purposes identified in the business associate contract. We address the issue of data mining by requiring that the business associate contract explicitly identify the uses or disclosures that the business associate is permitted to make with the protected health information. Aside from disclosures for data aggregation and business associate management, the business associate contract cannot authorize any uses or disclosures that the covered entity itself cannot make. Therefore, data mining by the business associate for any purpose not specified in the contract is a violation of the contract and grounds for termination of the contract by the covered entity.

Comment: One commenter stated that the rule needs to provide the ability to contract with persons and organizations to complete clinical studies, provide clinical expertise, and increase access to experts and quality of care.

Response: We agree, and do not prohibit covered entities from sharing protected health information under a business associate contract for these purposes.

Comment: A commenter requested clarification as to whether sister agencies are considered business partners when working together.

Response: It is unclear from the comment whether the “sister agencies” are components of a larger entity, are affiliated entities, or are otherwise linked. Requirements regarding sharing protected health information among affiliates and components are found in § 164.504.

Comment: One commenter stated that some union contracts specify that the employer and employees jointly conduct patient quality of care reviews. The commenter requested clarification as to whether this arrangement made the employee a business partner.

Response: An employee organization that agrees to perform quality assurance for a group health plan meets the definition of a business associate. We note that the employee representatives acting on behalf of the employee organization would be performing the functions of the organization, and the employee organization would be responsible under the business associate contract to ensure that the representatives abided by the restrictions and conditions of the contract. If the employee organization is a plan sponsor of the group health plan, the similar provisions of § 164.504(f) would apply instead of the business associate requirements. See § 164.502(e)(1).

Comment: Some commenters supported regulating employers as business partners of the health plan. These commenters believed that this approach provided flexibility by giving employers access to information when necessary while still holding employers accountable for improper use of the information. Many commenters, however, stressed that this approach would turn the relationship between employers, employees and other agents “on its head” by making the employer subordinate to its agents. In addition, several commenters objected to the business partner approach because they alleged it would place employers at risk for greater liability.

Response: We do not require a business associate contract for disclosure of protected health information from group health plans to employers. We do, however, put other conditions on the disclosure of protected health information from group health plans to employers who sponsor the plan. See further discussion in § 164.504 on disclosure of protected health information to employers.

Comment: One commenter expressed concern that the regulation would discourage organizations from participating with Planned Parenthood since pro bono and volunteer services may have no contract signed.

Response: We design the rule's requirements with respect to volunteers and pro bono services to allow flexibility to the covered entity so as not to disturb these arrangements. Specifically, when such volunteers work on the premises of the covered entity, the covered entity may choose to treat them as members of the covered entity's workforce or as business associates. See the definitions of business associate and workforce in § 160.103. If the volunteer performs its work off-site and needs protected health information, a business associate arrangement will be required. In this instance, where protected health information leaves the premises of the covered entity, privacy concerns are heightened and it is reasonable to require an agreement to protect the information. We believe that pro bono contractors will easily develop standard contracts to allow those activities to continue smoothly while protecting the health information that is shared.

 

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