negotiating roadblocks in handling medical records of drug seeking patients

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Negotiating Roadblocks In Handling Medical Records of Drug Seeking Patients April 3, 2009

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Negotiating Roadblocks In Handling Medical Records of Drug Seeking Patients. April 3, 2009. OBJECTIVES. Identify regulatory influences Provide guidance for documenting behaviors and drug seeking diagnosis Review practices for sharing patient drug seeking information - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

Negotiating Roadblocks In Handling Medical Records

of Drug Seeking Patients

April 3, 2009

Page 2: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

OBJECTIVES

• Identify regulatory influences • Provide guidance for documenting

behaviors and drug seeking diagnosis• Review practices for sharing patient

drug seeking information • Identify practices for disclosing drug

seeking behavior to law enforcement

Page 3: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

DISCLAIMER

• The information provided in this presentation does not constitute

legal advice and is intended to be used for guidance. Resources for questions include:

•Privacy Officer•Risk Manager

• If you require legal advice, please consult with an attorney.

Page 4: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

DRUG SEEKING BEHAVIOR

Refers to a patient's persistent, manipulative, and/or demanding behavior to obtain medication. It may include obtaining or attempting to obtain a prescription drug, procure or attempt to procure the administration of a prescription drug by fraud, deceit, willful misrepresentation, forgery, alteration of a prescription, willful concealment of a material fact, or use of a false name or address. Seeking excessive prescribed drugs is a crime when it involves fraud, forgery, deception or subterfuge.

Page 5: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

DRUG ABUSE

• Drug abuse means the use of a psychoactive substance for other than medicinal purposes which impairs the physical, mental, emotional, or social well-being of the user. 42 CFR, part 2, Subpart B 2.11.

Page 6: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

LAW ENFORCEMENT

• Law Enforcement Agency– City, County, Indian Tribe, State, or Federal

• Law Enforcement Official/Officer– Police Officer– Sheriff’s Deputy– Medical Examiner– Parole or Corrections Officer

45 CFR § 164.501; WI §§ 165.83(1)(b); 175.46(1)(g); 967.02(5)

Page 7: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

WHAT’S HAPPENING

• Fifteen people have died of prescription drug overdoses in Portage County since Jan. 1, 2006

• Milwaukee Journal Sentinel story – “Legal Drugs, Lethal Access”

Page 8: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

PRESCRIPTION DRUGS WITH HIGHEST POTENTIAL FOR ABUSE

• Oxycontin• Valium• Vicodin• Percocet• Xanax• Dolophine

Page 9: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

PATIENT OR CRIMINAL

• To Health Care Provider– Patient- With Patient Rights

• To Law Enforcement – Criminal

Healthcare providers are NOT an arm of law enforcement!

Page 10: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

REGULATORY INFLUENCES

• 45 CFR § 164.512(f)(5) – HIPAA Privacy Rule

• WI § 146.82(2)(a)5 – Confidentiality of Patient Health Care Records

• WI § 51.30 – State Alcohol, Drug Abuse, Developmental Disabilities and Mental Health Act

Page 11: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

REGULATORY INFLUENCES

• WI § 450.11(7) – Prescription Drugs & Prescription Devices – Prohibited Acts

• WI § 961 – Uniform Controlled Substances Act

Page 12: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

IMPORTANT CAVEAT

• Report information that is required or permitted BUT

• Disclosure of other PHI – e.g. patient chart – goes under standard analysis

Page 13: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

DISCLOSURES vs. REPORTS

• Mandatory reports: figure out to whom and how much

• Permissive reports: figure out scope• If no report required or permitted,

follow general rule: no disclosure unless:– authorized by patient OR – permitted under interface of HIPAA and

Wisconsin law.

Page 14: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

ENCOUNTER PRACTICES FOR VERIFICATION OF IDENTITY

• Verification of patient identity by a picture ID or other identifying information

• Suspicion patient is falsely presenting

• Red Flag Rules

Page 15: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

ENCOUNTER DOCUMENTATION

If suspect patient is exhibiting drug seeking behavior, document• Reason, objective and subjective• Provision of appropriate medical

screening examination and stabilizing treatment if patient is receiving treatment in ER or appearing to need emergency care in another setting

Page 16: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

ENCOUNTER DOCUMENTATION

• Results of positive blood or urine drug screen tests

• Review of past history of drug seeking behavior as documented from previous encounters

• Referral to patient’s primary provider or others

Page 17: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

ENCOUNTER DOCUMENTATION

• Clear communication with patient about behavior, treatment plan, medication needs, alternative treatment instead of medication, and education

Page 18: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

ENCOUNTER DOCUMENTATION

Final diagnosis of drug seeking behavior should not be documented unless there are strong objective findings to support the diagnosis.

Page 19: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

ENCOUNTER DOCUMENTATION

Place an alert on the record to heighten

awareness of the patient’s drug seeking

behavior to communicate to others in the

organization. • Limit access to those with a “need to know”

Page 20: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

DISCLOSURE TO PROVIDERS

• Permitted for treatment & payment purposes when direct patient-provider treatment relationship– Limits on mental health and alcohol &

drug abuse information

Page 21: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

DISCLOSURE TO PROVIDERS

• Notifying external health care providers and/or emergency departments of patient “making the rounds”– Organizational decision based on risks

and benefits

Page 22: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

DISCLOSURES BETWEEN HEALTH PLANS & PROVIDERS

• Health care providers to health plans– Treatment– Payment– Health Care Operations

• Health plans to health care providers– Payment and health care operations– Provider decision to use the information

Page 23: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

DISCLOSURES TO LAW ENFORCEMENT

• Crimes on the premises– Contact may be made with limited

information• Individual’s name• Circumstantial information

– HIPAA and Wis. Stat. 51 permit reporting

– Wis. Stat. 146 unclear• organization decision

Anything more requires authorization by the patient or a court order

Page 24: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

DISCLOSURES TO LAW ENFORCEMENT

• Crimes on the premises– Patient steals drugs from facility

– Patient steals prescription pad from facility

– Patient presents to retail pharmacy with an altered prescription

– Patient threatens harm to provider/staff

Page 25: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

DISCLOSURES TO LAW ENFORCEMENT

• Questionable reportable crimes on the premises– Patient is a licensed healthcare provider

– reporting to licensing board

– Patient is pregnant and behavior a potential threat to unborn child

– Patient has illegal drugs on his/her person

Page 26: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

DISCLOSURES TO LAW ENFORCEMENT

• Reportable crimes on the premises seek guidance– Patient presents to provider with false

or misrepresentation of name

– Patient presents to provider with another person’s name (identity theft)

– Patient denies care for condition by other providers; records indicate care episodes elsewhere

Page 27: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

DISCLOSURES TO LAW ENFORCEMENT

• Providers are required to report to law enforcement officials and/or the medical examiner, the death of any individual who has died under the following circumstances:– unexplained, unusual, or suspicious

circumstances, homicides, suicides, deaths due to poisoning, whether homicidal, suicidal, or accidental.

Page 28: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

DISCLOSURES TO LAW ENFORCEMENT

• Providers are required to disclose upon request patient PHI (health records) to medical examiners responsible for completing a medical certificate or investigating the death.

Page 29: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

INQUIRIES FROM LAW ENFORCEMENT WITH NO BACKUP

• If general patient: may disclose facility directory information to verified law enforcement asking for patient by name, unless opted out.

• If mental health/substance abuse/DD: can neither confirm nor deny.

Page 30: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

INQUIRIES WITHOUT BACKUP(CONTINUED)

• Doesn't matter if:– Patient is allegedly an illegal alien– Patient gave a false name– Patient is suspected of committing a

crime (unless imminent danger)– Patient is suspected of involvement in a

car crash– Information is somehow already out

there

Page 31: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

NON-REPORTABLEPATIENT BEHAVIOR

• Patient presents altered prescription to external pharmacy (crime on premise of external pharmacy)

• Patient violates terms of established “pain contract”

Page 32: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

ORGANIZATION DOCUMENTATION

• Guidance or policy & procedure– Provides direction and awareness to

workforce – Informs workforce what to disclose– Addresses disclosures not involving

PHI– Prevents over and under reporting

Page 33: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

ORGANIZATIONAL TRAINING

• Registration staff• Health Information Management

staff• Treatment staff• Ambulance workforce

Page 34: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

Scenario 1

Patient steals drugs from mental health facility.

–Report ?

–Disclose?

Page 35: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

Answer to Scenario 1

Provider may report as a "crime on the premises."

WI § 450.11(7)(a)

Page 36: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

Scenario 2

Patient steals a prescription pad from mental health facility.

–Report ?

–Disclose?

Page 37: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

Answer to Scenario 2

Provider may report as a "crime on the premises."

WI § 450.11(7)(a)

Page 38: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

Scenario 3

Patient presents to the pharmacy with an altered/forged prescription.

– Report ?

– Disclose?

Page 39: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

Answer to Scenario 3

Pharmacist may report as a crime on the pharmacy premise and may provide a copy of the altered prescription based on the organization’s policy for doing so.

WI § 450.11(7)(a)

Page 40: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

Scenario 4

Provider notified that patient presented to pharmacy with an altered/ forged prescription.

–Report ?

–Disclose?

Page 41: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

Answer to Scenario 4

Pharmacist may report as a crime on the pharmacy premise and may provide a copy of the altered prescription based on the organization’s policy for doing so.

WI § 450.11(7)(a)

Page 42: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

Scenario 5

Patient presents to provider with false or misrepresentation of name.

–Report ?

–Disclose?

Page 43: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

Answer to Scenario 5

Provider may report as a crime on the premise. Refer to Local Privacy Officer, Risk Manager, administrative leader, or administrator-on-call or System Privacy Officer/Risk Manager. Legal Counsel review as needed.

WI § 450.11(7)(a)

Page 44: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

Scenario 6

Patient presents to provider with another person’s name (identity theft).

–Report ?

–Disclose?

Page 45: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

Answer to Scenario 6

Provider may report as a crime on the premise. Refer to Local Privacy Officer, Risk Manager, administrative leader, or administrator-on-call or System Privacy Officer/Risk Manager. Legal Counsel review as needed.

WI § 450.11(7)(a); 18 USC § 1028(a)(7); WI § 943.201; WI § 943.203

Page 46: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

Scenario 7

Patient is a licensed health care provider and commits drug seeking crime.

–Report ?

–Disclose?

Page 47: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

Answer to Scenario 7

Yes. Refer to scenarios above or regulations; questionable report to state licensing board and to be determined by administration/ leadership. Refer to System Privacy Officer/Risk Manager and Legal Counsel prior to reporting to licensing board.

WI §§ 450.11(7)(a), 146.82(2)(a)5, 440.042(2)

Page 48: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

Scenario 8

Patient denies care for the condition by other providers; access to external records (integrated record system/regional health information network) indicates similar care episodes elsewhere.

–Report ?

–Disclose?

Page 49: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

Answer to Scenario 8

Questionable as crime on premise. Provider. Refer to Local Privacy Officer, Risk Manager, administrative leader, or administrator-on-call or System Privacy Officer/Risk Manager. Legal Counsel review as needed. WI § 450.11(7)(a)

Page 50: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

Scenario 9

Patient has illegal drugs on his/her person.

–Report ?

–Disclose?

Page 51: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

Answer to Scenario 9

Questionable. Organization must develop policy for process/disposal. To be determined by organization policy.

Multiple

Page 52: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

Scenario 10

Patient is pregnant and drug seeking behavior a potential threat (abuse/harm) to unborn child.

–Report ?

–Disclose?

Page 53: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

Answer to Scenario 10

Questionable. Refer to System Privacy Officer/Risk Manager and Legal Counsel.

WI § 48.981(3)(a)1

WI § 146.82(2)(a)11

Page 54: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

Scenario 11

Patient threatens harm to provider/staff in drug seeking behavior.

–Report ?

–Disclose?

Page 55: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

Answer to Scenario 11

Questionable. Based on perceived severity of threat of harm, immediately reportable by the provider, staff member, security, etc.

Dangerous Patient Standard (Schuster vs. Altenberg)

Page 56: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

Scenario 12

Law enforcement officials request a copy of an altered/forged prescription presented to the Pharmacy (not the original prescription).

–Report ?

–Disclose?

Page 57: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

Answer to Scenario 12

Questionable; 146.82 written broadly - Prescription (copy) a health record as covered under WI § 146.82? Provider. Refer to Local Privacy Officer, Risk Manager, administrative leader, or administrator-on-call or System Privacy Officer/Risk Manager. Legal Counsel review as needed. Organization will need to determine status of prescription as part of the patient’s legal health record as it is not clearly defined in § 146.82.

WI § 450.11(7)(a) and § 146.82

Page 58: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

Scenario 13

Patient violates terms of established/known “pain contract.”

–Report ?

–Disclose?

Page 59: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

Answer to Scenario 13

No. Violation of a pain contract is not a crime. Provider may consider reporting violation to provider who issued the pain contract.

Page 60: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

Scenario 14

Provider contacted by patient’s health plan regarding multiple prescriptions prescribed by and filled by other providers.

–Report ?

–Disclose?

Page 61: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

Answer to Scenario 14

No. Provider must make a decision as to how the information shall be used or retained as part of the patient’s health record. Not necessarily an indication of drug seeking behavior.

Page 62: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients

PRESENTERS

Sarah Coyne, JDQuarles & Brady

[email protected]

Chrisann Lemery, MS, RHIA, FAHIMAWEA Trust [email protected]

Page 63: Negotiating  Roadblocks  In Handling Medical Records  of Drug Seeking Patients