HIPAA Regulations: The Administrative Requirements: Personnel Designations - § 164.530(a)

As Contained in the HHS HIPAA Rules

 

HHS Regulations
The Administrative Requirements: Personnel Designations - § 164.530(a)

 

(a)(1) Standard: Personnel designations. (i) A covered entity must designate a privacy official who is responsible for the development and implementation of the policies and procedures of the entity.

(ii) A covered entity must designate a contact person or office who is responsible for receiving complaints under this section and who is able to provide further information about matters covered by the notice required by §164.520.

(2) Implementation specification: Personnel designations. A covered entity must document the personnel designations in paragraph (a)(1) of this section as required by paragraph (j) of this section.

 

HHS Description
The Administrative Requirements: Personnel Designations

 

In § 164.518(a) of the NPRM, we proposed that covered entities be required to designate an individual as the covered entity’s privacy official, responsible for the implementation and development of the entity’s privacy policies and procedures. We also proposed that covered entities be required to designate a contact person to receive complaints about privacy and provide information about the matters covered by the entity’s notice. We indicated that the contact person could be, but was not required to be, the person designated as the privacy official. We proposed to leave implementation details to the discretion of the covered entity. We expected implementation to vary widely depending on the size and nature of the covered entity, with small offices assigning this as an additional duty to an existing staff person, and large organizations creating a full-time privacy official. In proposed § 164.512, we also proposed to require the covered plan or provider's privacy notice to include the name of a contact person for privacy matters.

The final regulation retains the requirements for a privacy official and contact person as specified in the NPRM. These designations must be documented. The designation of privacy official and contact person positions within affiliated entities will depend on how the covered entity chooses to designate the covered entity(ies) under § 164.504(b). If a subsidiary is defined as a covered entity under this regulation, then a separate privacy official and contact person is required for that covered entity. If several subsidiaries are designated as a single covered entity, pursuant to § 164.504(b), then together they need have only a single privacy officer and contact person. If several covered entities share a notice for services provided on the same premises, pursuant to § 164.520(d), that notice need designate only one privacy official and contact person for the information collected under that notice.

These requirements are consistent with the approach recommended by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations, and the National Committee for Quality Assurance, in its paper “Protecting Personal Health Information; A framework for Meeting the Challenges in a Managed Care Environment.” This paper notes that “accountability is enhanced by having focal points who are responsible for assessing compliance with policies and procedures. . . ” (p. 29)

 

HHS Response to Comments Received
The Administrative Requirements: Personnel Designations

 

Comment: Many of the commenters on this topic objected to the cost of establishing a privacy official, including the need to hire additional staff, which might need to include a lawyer or other highly paid individual.

Response: We believe that designation of a privacy official is essential to ensure a central point of accountability within each covered entity for privacy-related issues. The privacy official is charged with developing and implementing the policies and procedures for the covered entity, as required throughout the regulation, and for compliance with the regulation generally. While the costs for these activities are part of the costs of compliance with this rule, not extra costs associated with the designation of a privacy official, we do anticipate that there will be some cost associated with this requirement. The privacy official role may be an additional responsibility given to an existing employee in the covered entity, such as an office manager in a small entity or an information officer or compliance official in a larger institution. Cost estimates for the privacy official are discussed in detail in the overall cost analysis.

Comment: A few commenters argued for more flexibility in meeting the requirement for accountability. One health care provider maintained that covered entities should be able to establish their own system of accountability. For example, most physician offices already have the patient protections incorporated in the proposed administrative requirements – the commenter urged that the regulation should explicitly promote the application of flexibility and scalability. A national physician association noted that, in small offices, in particular, responsibility for the policies and procedures should be allowed to be shared among several people. A major manufacturing corporation asserted that mandating a privacy official is unnecessary and that it would be preferable to ask for the development of policies that are designed to ensure that processes are maintained to assure compliance.

Response: We believe that a single focal point is needed to achieve the necessary accountability. At the same time, we recognize that covered entities are organized differently and have different information systems. We therefore do not prescribe who within a covered entity must serve as the privacy official, nor do we prohibit combining this function with other duties. Duties may be delegated and shared, so long as there is one point of accountability for the covered entity's policies and procedures and compliance with this regulation.

Comment: Some commenters echoed the proposal of a professional information management association that the regulation establish formal qualifications for the privacy official, suggesting that this should be a credentialed information management professional with specified minimum training standards. One commenter emphasized that the privacy official should be sufficiently high in management to have influence.

Response: While there may be some advantages to establishing formal qualifications, we concluded the disadvantages outweigh the advantages. Since the job of privacy official will differ substantially among organizations of varying size and function, specifying a single set of qualifications would sacrifice flexibility and scalability in implementation.

Comment: A few commenters suggested that we provide guidance on the tasks of the privacy official. One noted that this would reduce the burden on covered entities to clearly identify those tasks during the initial HIPAA implementation phase.

Response: The regulation itself outlines the tasks of the privacy official, by specifying the policies and procedures required, and otherwise explaining the duties of covered entities. Given the wide variation in the function and size of covered entities, providing further detail here would unnecessarily reduce flexibility for covered entities. We will, however, provide technical assistance in the form of guidance on the various provisions of the regulation before the compliance date.

Comment: Some comments expressed concern that the regulation would require a company with subsidiaries to appoint a privacy official within each subsidiary. Instead they argued that the corporate entity should have the option of designating a single corporate official rather than one at each subsidiary.

Response: In the final regulation, we give covered entities with multiple subsidiaries that meet the definition of covered entities under this rule the flexibility to designate whether such subsidiaries are each a separate covered entity or are together a single covered entity. (See § 164.504(b) for the rules requiring such designation.) If only one covered entity is designated for the subsidiaries, only one privacy officer is needed. Further, we do not prohibit the privacy official of one covered entity from serving as the privacy official of another covered entity, so long as all the requirements of this rule are met for each such covered entity.

 

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