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My doctor has added a thyroid med to my meds in
order to help stabilize me and kick in an
antidepressant without sending me into mania.
Does anyone know if this med causes hair loss as
can be seen in hyperthyroidism. I sure hope not
cause my hair is so thin from the large dose of
Depakote already
Synthroid for Depression? |
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The
1996 Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) required that a
uniform set of medical records privacy standards be implemented for the first
time in the U.S. When
congress was unable to pass standards, the Clinton Administration proposed a set
of standards which has now been passed by the Bush administration. The new
standards are set to go into effect in 2003.
Mental health records
are treated somewhat differently from other medical records. Psychotherapy
records are specifically granted a different status than other medical records.
The new regulations are complex. Here are some of the highlights:
- Stricter requirements
will apply for psychotherapy notes than for other health information. Specific
written authorization is required for most disclosures - a general release
form is not enough. This regulation is thought to apply to detailed
psychotherapy "process notes" - not necessarily to brief notes that are entered into
a general medical record.
- Insurance companies and
other health plans are not allowed to condition enrollment or eligibility for
benefits on the patient's providing an authorization for disclosure of
psychotherapy notes. Therapists can't be required to send copies of
their detailed notes in order to receive payment. Health plans can still
require that detailed forms be filled-out.
- Patients will have the
right to request changes to their medical record (adding information that
corrects an error).
- Patients will have the
right to request restrictions on uses or disclosures of medical information
(for example, they can request that information not be shared with a
particular individual). The provider or health plan then decides if it will
honor this request.
- Patients will be able to request that communications from the therapist be made in a
certain way (such as prohibiting phone calls to the patient's home or work). The
regulations state that this request must be honored unless it is "unreasonable
and creates an undue administration burden".
(Summarized from information
at the Bazelon Center
for Mental Health Law and other sources.)
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Leonard Holmes, Ph.D. http://mentalhealth.about.com |
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