Institute: ONC | Component: 2 | Unit: 9 | Lecture: c | Slide: 26
Institute:Office of National Coordinator (ONC) Workforce Training Curriculum
Component:The Culture of Health Care
Unit:Privacy, Confidentiality, and Security
Lecture:HIPAA Privacy Rule
Slide content:Privacy, Confidentiality, and Security References Lecture c Continued 3 McGraw, D. (2009). Rethinking the role of consent in protecting health information privacy . Washington, DC: Center for Democracy & Technology. Retrieved from http://www.cdt.org/healthprivacy/20090126Consent.pdf McGraw, D., Dempsey, J., Harris, L., & Goldman, J. (2009). Privacy as an enabler, not an impediment: Building trust into health information exchange. Health Affairs , 28, 416427. Nass, S., Levit , L., & Gostin , L. (Eds.). (2009). Beyond the HIPAA privacy rule: Enhancing privacy, improving health through research . Washington, DC: National Academies Press. National Institutes of Health (2007). HIPAA privacy rule. Retrieved from https://privacyruleandresearch.nih.gov Ness, R. (2007). Influence of the HIPAA privacy rule on health research. JAMA , 298, 21642170. Oregon Health and Science University. OHSU notice of privacy practices. Retrieved from http://www.ohsu.edu/xd/about/services/integrity/ips/npp.cfm Steinberg, M., & Rubin, E. (2009). The HIPAA Privacy Rule: Lacks patient benefit, impedes research growth. Association of Academic Health Centers (AAHC). Retrieved from http://ww.aahcdc.org/Portals/0/pdf/AAHC_HIPAA_Privacy_Rule_Impedes_Research_Growth.pdf Terry, N. (2014). Health privacy is difficult but not impossible in a post-HIPAA data-driven world. Chest ,146(3), 835840. 26
Slide notes:No audio. Health IT Workforce Curriculum Version 4.0 26