HIPAA Regulations: The Administrative Requirements: Training - § 164.530(b)

As Contained in the HHS HIPAA Rules

 

HHS Regulations: The Administrative Requirements: Training- § 164.530(b)

 

(b)(1) Standard: Training. A covered entity must train all members of its workforce on the policies and procedures with respect to protected health information required by this subpart and subpart D of this part, as necessary and appropriate for the members of the workforce to carry out their functions within the covered entity.

(2) Implementation specifications: Training. (i) A covered entity must provide training that meets the requirements of paragraph (b)(1) of this section, as follows:

(A) To each member of the covered entity's workforce by no later than the compliance date for the covered entity;

(B) Thereafter, to each new member of the workforce within a reasonable period of time after the person joins the covered entity's workforce; and

(C) To each member of the covered entity's workforce whose functions are affected by a material change in the policies or procedures required by this subpart or subpart D of this part, within a reasonable period of time after the material change becomes effective in accordance with paragraph (i) of this section.

(ii) A covered entity must document that the training as described in paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section has been provided, as required by paragraph (j) of this section.

 

HHS Description
The Administrative Requirements: Training

 

In § 164.518(b) of the NPRM we proposed to require that covered entities provide training on the entities’ policies and procedures to all members of the workforce likely to have access to protected health information. Each entity would be required to provide initial training by the date on which this rule became applicable. After that date, each covered entity would have to provide training to new members of the workforce within a reasonable time after joining the entity. In addition, we proposed that when a covered entity made material changes in its privacy policies or procedures, it would be required to retrain those members of the workforce whose duties were related to the change within a reasonable time of making the change.

The NPRM would have required that, upon completion of the training, the trainee would be required to sign a statement certifying that he or she received the privacy training and would honor all of the entity's privacy policies and procedures. Entities would determine the most effective means of achieving this training requirement for their workforce. We also proposed that, at least every three years after the initial training, covered entities would be required to have each member of the workforce sign a new statement certifying that he or she would honor all of the entity's privacy policies and procedures. The covered entity would have been required to document its policies and procedures for complying with the training requirements.

The final regulation requires covered entities to train all members of their workforce on the policies and procedures with respect to protected health information required by this rule, as necessary and appropriate for the members of the workforce to carry out their functions within the covered entity. We do not change the proposed time lines for training existing and new members of the workforce, or for training due to material changes in the covered entity’s policies and procedures. We eliminate both the requirement for employees to sign a certification following training and the triennial re-certification requirement. Covered entities are responsible for implementing policies and procedures to meet these requirements and for documenting that training has been provided.

 

HHS Response to Comments Received
The Administrative Requirements: Training

 

Comment: A few commenters felt that the proposed provision was too stringent, and that the content of the training program should be left to the reasonable discretion of the covered entity.

Response: We clarify that we do not prescribe the content of the required training; the nature of the training program is left to the discretion of the covered entity. The scenarios in the NPRM preamble of potential approaches to training for different sized covered entities were intended as examples of the flexibility and scalability of this requirement.

Comment: Most commenters on this provision asserted that recertification/retraining every three years is excessive, restrictive, and costly. Commenters felt that retraining intervals should be left to the discretion of the covered entity. Some commenters supported retraining only in the event of a material change. Some commenters supported the training requirement as specified in the NPRM.

Response: For the reasons cited by the commenters, we eliminate the triennial recertification requirements in the final rule. We also clarify that retraining is not required every three years. Retraining is only required in the case of material changes to the privacy policies and procedures of the covered entity.

Comment: Several commenters objected to the burden imposed by required signatures from employees after they are trained. Many commenters suggested that electronic signatures be accepted for various reasons. Some felt that it would be less costly than manually producing, processing, and retaining the hard copies of the forms. Some suggested sending out the notice to the personal workstation via email or some other electronic format and having staff reply via email. One commenter suggested that the covered entity might opt to give web based training instead of classroom or some other type. The commenter indicated that with web based training, the covered entity could record whether or not an employee had received his or her training through the use of a guest book or registration form on the web site. Thus, a physical signature should not be required.

Response: We agree that there are many appropriate mechanisms by which covered entities can implement their training programs, and therefore remove this requirement for signature. We establish only a general requirement that covered entities document compliance with the training requirement.

Comment: Some commenters were concerned that there was no proposed requirement for business associates to receive training and/or to train their employees. The commenters believed that if the business associate violated any privacy requirements, the covered entity would be held accountable. These commenters urged the Secretary to require periodic training for appropriate management personnel assigned outside of the component unit of the covered entity, including business associates. Other commenters felt that it would not be fair to require covered entities to impose training requirements on business associates.

Response: We do not have the statutory authority directly to require business associates to train their employees. We also believe it would be unnecessarily burdensome to require covered entities to monitor business associates' establishment of specific training requirements. Covered entities' responsibility for breaches of privacy by their business associates is described in §§ 164.504(e) and 164.530(f). If a covered entity believes that including a training requirement in one or more of its business associate contracts is an appropriate means of protecting the health information provided to the business associate, it is free to do so.

Comments: Many commenters argued that training, as well as all of the other administrative requirements, are too costly for covered entities and that small practices would not be able to bear the added costs. Commenters also suggested that HHS should provide training materials at little, or no, cost to the covered entity.

Response: For the final regulation, we make several changes to the proposed provisions. We believe that these changes address the issue of administrative cost and burden to the greatest extent possible, consistent with protecting the privacy of health information. In enforcing the privacy rule, we expect to provide general training materials. We also hope to work with professional associations and other groups that target classes of providers, plans and patients, in developing specialized material for these groups.

We note that, under long-standing legal principles, entities are generally responsible for the actions of their workforce. The requirement to train workforce members to implement the covered entity's privacy policies and procedures, and do such things as pass evidence of potential problems to those responsible, is in line with these principles. For example, the comments and our fact finding indicate that, today, many hospitals require their workforce members to sign a confidentiality agreement, and include confidentiality matters in their employee handbooks.

 

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