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Electronic Communications with Patients: Practical, Ethical and Legal Considerations. Michael Sacopulos, JD Erik Southard, CFNP, DNP. More than 500m active users on Facebook Hospitals such as Kaiser Permanente & Mayo Clinic use social media to benefit: patients, employees and practitioners
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Electronic Communications with Patients: Practical, Ethical and Legal Considerations Michael Sacopulos, JD Erik Southard, CFNP, DNP
More than 500m active users on Facebook Hospitals such as Kaiser Permanente & Mayo Clinic use social media to benefit: patients, employees and practitioners In 2010, Physicians spent 8 hours a week online 13% of med student found violating their patients confidentiality 60% of med students found to have unprofessional online behavior
HITECH Act Decrypted HIPAA enacted 1996 -little to no prosecution HITECH Act enacted in 2009 - increase HIPAA confidentiality -tougher penalties -notification of breach -includes business associates
HITECH Act Decrypted Penalties: Prior: No more than $100 for each violation or $25,000 for all identical violations of the same provision. Currently: Established tiered ranges of increasing minimum penalty amounts, with a maximum penalty of $1.5 million for all violations of an identical provision. Future: Office of Civil Rights has asked $5.6 million in addition to their $46.7 million budget in 2012 to enforce the HITECH Act
How “you” communicate with a patient HITECH Act requires all communications involving ePHI be encrypted • Healthcare providers may seek their patients consent to communicating via unencrypted e-mail • Get patients consent in writing • Don’t give patient a binary choice • Consent document should note that the patient may withdraw his or her consent at a later time
How “you” communicate with a patient • Physician may be held responsible • Use an auto response feature • Don’t assume patient initiated e-mail is consent • Double check the e-mail address • Add e-mail correspondence to patient’s chart
& patients moiety12Matty Lucas @owenpallettmypatientlast night was named Patrick Owens, thought you'd appreciate that#TruFan l TryToppingTria Sun Kiss. Ytf is mypatient here?! PeruvianGodess alexandra i so badly wanna strangle mypatient!?! tryin to remain calm. this is testin my patience && tolerance to a whole other level gs2782 gav smith Wonder if mypatient who had been waiting for 9 hours has actually seen a dr yet!!!,
American Medical Association • Use privacy settings • Monitor internet presence • Maintain appropriate boundaries • Separate personal and professional content • Recognize online content can affect reputation with patients
Ohio State Medical Association • Employees should distinguish their own opinions • Don’t post negative comments about your co-workers • What you say online may be held against you at work • Monitor others internet behavior • Include employees when writing social media policy • Does your malpractice insurance cover social media? • Provide worthwhile company information and perspective
“Emerging Issues” • Defamation on Internet • Physician sued for plastic surgery procedure • Then launched website www.mysurgerynightmare.com • California courts: • Surgeon was public figure • No remedy from Internet Service Provider (ISP)
“Solution” Signed Contract
“Web Reality” This was one of the worst doctor's visits I've ever had. Dr. XXXX was unconcerned with how scared I was and seemed arrogant. Her staff treats you like you're a moron, particularly on the phone.
Controlling your online reputation • Find out where you stand • Sign up for Google alerts • Purchase your name or practice’s domain name • Implement Social Media policy for your employees • Ask patients to review you on a reputable website • Consider asking patients to sign an agreement
Contact: Mike Sacopulos, JD Mike_Sacopulos@Sacopulos.com Erik Southard, CFNP, DNP