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HIPS
Series >
Privacy
Issues for Marketers > Quiz
The
questions are below. If you need to review, the course content
is here.
The correct answers,
and explanations for why we believe them to be correct, are
provided here.
Please note that
Better Samaritan Hospital (BSH) and Big State University (BSU)
are fictional organizations. Any resemblance to existing institutions
or persons is purely coincidental.
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1. Patients regularly ask the staff at Better
Samaritan Hospital about the providers in the BSH preferred
provider network, about benefits coverage under alternative
plans, and the like. Is providing this sort of information
considered marketing under HIPAA?
A. Yes, because any recommendation of particular coverage
or a particular provider for a person affects the money that
Better Samaritan gets for providing services.
B. No, because questions about benefits, providers, etc.,
are excluded from the definition of marketing.
C. Maybe. It depends on whether there is remuneration for
making particular recommendations.
D. HIPAA regulations do not address this issue.
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2. Physicians at Better Samaritan, like those everywhere
else, are routinely asked about alternative treatments for
conditions -- such as drugs that their patients have seen
in advertisements on TV or in the newspaper. Is the discussion
of such options marketing?
A. Yes, because the question is prompted by commercial advertisements.
B. No, because the question relates to the patient's treatment.
C. Maybe. It depends on whether or not the physician or
hospital receives any remuneration from the companies that
make the products in question.
D. HIPAA regulations do not discuss this issue.
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3. Some physicians at Better Samaritan Hospital receive
remuneration from pharmaceutical companies for prescribing
the latters' most profitable drugs. Does this sort of practice
require a marketing authorization or a disclosure of the payment
arrangement to the patient?
A. No. The marketing definition specifically excludes communications
for the individual's treatment and for case management, care
coordination or the recommendation of alternative therapies,
regardless of whether there is remuneration.
B. No. But it may be a good idea to disclose the arrangement
to the patient anyway.
C. No authorization is required, but disclosure is required.
D. Both authorization and disclosure are required.
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4. Better Samaritan plans to sell lists of its patients
to pharmaceutical companies, so that the latter can directly
market particular drugs to its patients with particular diagnoses.
Does this practice require a marketing authorization?
A. Yes, because it is a disclosure to a third party, for
remuneration, with the aim of marketing the latter's products.
B. No, because it is related to the patients' treatment,
and everything related to treatment is exempt.
C. This would be permitted if there were a business associate
contracts in place between the hospital and the pharmaceutical
companies.
D. It depends on how much the pharmaceutical companies are
paying. If the compensation is "nominal" there is
no need for an authorization.
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5. Better Samaritan is considering launching a series of
newsletters and other communications, such as mailings reminding
women to get an annual mammogram, providing information about
how to lower cholesterol, about new developments in health
care (e.g., new diagnostic tools), about health or "wellness"
classes, about support groups, and so forth. Does it need
an authorization for this?
A. You bet it does. This is clearly marketing.
B. It may have the same effect as marketing -- namely, increasing
Better Samaritan's business -- but this sort of general communication
requires no authorization.
C. It is permitted as an exception to marketing, only if
an "opt-out" letter is sent in advance.
D. The regulations do not address this kind of communication.
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The
correct answers, and explanations for why we believe them
to be correct, are provided here.
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