Privacy Practices
This notice describes how information about you may be
used and disclosed and how you can get access
to this information.
Please review it carefully.
If you have any questions or requests, please contact
Hospital Administration at (570) 644-4200.
Each time you visit a hospital, physician, or other healthcare
provider, a record of your visit is made. Typically, this record contains
your symptoms, examination and test results, diagnoses, treatment,
and a plan for future care or treatment. This information, often referred
to as your health or medical record, serves as a:
- Basis for planning your care and treatment
- Means
of communication
among the many health professionals who contribute
to your care
- Legal document describing
the care
you received
- Means by
which you
or a third-party payer can verify that services billed were
actually provided
- A tool in educating heath professionals
- A
source of data
for medical research
- A source of information
for public health
officials charged with improving the health of the nation
- A source of data for facility
planning and
marketing
- A tool with which we can assess
and continually
work to improve the care we render and the outcomes we
achieve
- Understanding what is in your record and
how your health
information is used helps you to:
- Ensure its accuracy
- Better understand who,
what, when, where, and why others may access your health information
- Make more informed decisions when authorizing
disclosure
to other

Although your health record is the
physical property of the healthcare practitioner
or facility that compiled
it, the information belongs
to you. You have the right to:
- Request a restriction on certain uses
and disclosures
of your information as provided by 45 CFR 164.522
- Obtain a paper
copy of the notice of information practices
upon requestInspect
and obtain a copy of your health
record as provided for in 45 CFR 164.524
- Amend
your health record (45 CFR 164.528) through
specific written notification
to the Director of the Health Information Management
Department.
- Obtain
an accounting of disclosures of your
health information as
provided in 45 CFR 164.528
- Request communications
of your health information by alternative means or
at alternative locationsRevoke your
authorization to use or
disclose health information except to the extent that
action has already been
taken

We
are required to protect the
privacy of health
information about you and that
can be identified with you, which
we
call "protected health information," or "PHI" for
short. We
are required to:
- Protect PHI that we have created
or received about your past, present, or future
health
condition, health care
we provide to you, or payment for your health
care;
- Notify you about how we protect your PHI and
as to our legal
duties and privacy practices with respect
to information we collect
and maintain about you;
- Explain
how, when and why we use and/or disclose PHI
about
you;
- Abide
by the terms of this Notice and only use and/or
disclose
PHI as we have described
in
this Notice;
- Maintain
the privacy of your health information;
- Notify
you if we are unable to agree to a requested
restriction;
- Accommodate
reasonable requests you may have to communicate
health
information by alternative means or at alternative
locations;
We
are required to follow the procedures in this
Notice.
We reserve the right to change our practices
and
to make the new provisions
effective for all protected health information
we
maintain.
Should our information practices change, we
will
post
the revised notice in our
offices, mail a revised notice to the address
you
have
supplied us. We
will not use or disclose your health information
without
your authorization, except as described in
this
notice.
If have questions and would like additional information,
you may contact the Privacy Officer at (570) 644-4296,
the Corporate Compliance Officer at (570) 644-3917,
or Administration at (570)
644-4200. If you
believe your privacy rights have been violated, you
can file a complaint with the director of health
information management or with
the secretary
of Health and Human Services. There will be no retaliation
for filing a complaint.
Examples of Disclosures for Treatment, Payment and
Health Operations
We will use your health information for treatment. For example: Information obtained by a nurse, physician, or other member
of your healthcare team will be recorded in your record and used to determine
the course of treatment that should work best for you. Your physician
will document in your record his or her expectations of the members of
your healthcare team. Members of your healthcare team will then record
the actions they took and their observations. In that way, the physician
will know how you are responding to treatment.
We will also provide your physician or a subsequent healthcare provider
with copies of various reports that should assist
him or her in treating you once you're discharged from this hospital.
We will use your health information for payment.
For example: A bill may be sent
to you or a third-party payer. The information on or accompanying the
bill may include information
that identifies you, as well as your diagnosis, procedures,
and supplies used.
We will use your health information for regular health
operations.
For example: Members of the medical
staff, the risk or quality improvement manager, or members
of the quality improvement team may use information in
your health record to assess the care and
outcomes in your case and others like it.
This
information will then be used in an effort to
continually improve the quality and effectiveness
of the healthcare and service we provide.
Business associates: There are
some services provided in our organization through contacts with business
associates. Examples
include physician services in the emergency department
and radiology, certain laboratory
tests, and a copy service we use when making
copies of your health record. When these services
are contracted, we may disclose your health information
to our business associate so that they can perform
the job we've asked them to do and bill you or
your third-party payer for services rendered.
To protect your health information, however,
we require the business associate to appropriately
safeguard your information.
Directory: Unless you notify us
that you object, we will use your name, location in the facility, general
condition,
and religious affiliation for directory purposes.
This information may be provided to members of
the clergy and, except for religious affiliation,
to other people who ask for you by name.
Notification: We may use or
disclose information to notify or assist in notifying a family
member, personal representative, or another person
responsible for your care,
your location, and general
condition.
Communication with
family: Health professionals,
using their best judgement, may disclose
to a family member, other relative, close personal
friend or any other person
you identify, health information
relevant to that person's involvement in
your care or payment related to your care.
Research: We may disclose information
to researchers when their research has been approved by
an institutional review board that has reviewed
the research proposal and established protocols
to
ensure the privacy of your health information.
Funeral directors: We may disclose
health information to funeral directors consistent with applicable
law to carry out their duties.
Organ procurement organizations: Consistent
with applicable law, we may disclose health information
to organ procurement organizations or other entities
engaged in the procurement, banking,
or transplantation of organs for the purpose
of tissue donation and transplant. Marketing & fund raising: We
may contact you to provide appointment reminders or information about treatment
alternatives or other
health-related benefits and services
that may be of interest
to you. We may contact you
as part of a fund-raising effort. You have
the right to withdraw your name from fundraising
and marketing
activities by notification in writing.
Food and Drug Administration
(FDA): We may disclose
to the FDA health information relative to
adverse events with respect to food, supplements,
product and product defects,
or post marketing
surveillance information to enable product
recalls, repairs, or replacement.
Workers compensation: We may disclose
health information to the extent authorized by and to the extent
necessary to comply with laws relating to workers
compensation or other similar programs established
by law.
Public health: As required
by law, we may disclose your health information to public health
or legal authorities charged with preventing
or controlling disease, injury, or
disability.
Correctional institution: Should
you be an inmate of a correctional institution, we may disclose
to the institution or agents thereof health information necessary
for your health and the health
and safety of other individuals.
Law enforcement: We may disclose
health information for law enforcement purposes as required
by law or in response to a valid subpoena.
Federal law makes provision for your health information
to be released to an appropriate health oversight
agency, public health authority or attorney, provided that a work force
member or business
associate believes in good faith that we have
engaged in unlawful conduct or have otherwise violated professional or
clinical standards and are
potentially endangering one or more patients, workers or the public.

Effective Date: January 1, 2003
Sources: Hughes, Gwen "Practice Brief: Notice of Information Practices
(Updated)", Journal of AHIMA |