HIPAA Privacy Regulations: Uses and Disclosures For Which Consent, an Authorization, or Opportunity to Agree or Object is Not Required: Specialized Government Functions - § 164.512(k)

As Contained in the HHS HIPAA Privacy Rules

 

HHS Regulations as Amended January 2013
Uses and Disclosures For Which Consent, an Authorization, or Opportunity to Agree or Object is Not Required: Uses and Disclosures for Specialized Government Functions - § 164.512(k)

 

(k) Standard: Uses and disclosures for specialized government functions—(1) Military and veterans activities—(i) Armed Forces personnel. A covered entity may use and disclose the protected health information of individuals who are Armed Forces personnel for activities deemed necessary by appropriate military command authorities to assure the proper execution of the military mission, if the appropriate military authority has published by notice in the Federal Register the following information:

(A) Appropriate military command authorities; and

(B) The purposes for which the protected health information may be used or disclosed.

(ii) Separation or discharge from military service. A covered entity that is a component of the Departments of Defense or Homeland Security may disclose to the Department of Veterans Affairs (DVA) the protected health information of an individual who is a member of the Armed Forces upon the separation or discharge of the individual from military service for the purpose of a determination by DVA of the individual's eligibility for or entitlement to benefits under laws administered by the Secretary of Veterans Affairs.

(iii) Veterans. A covered entity that is a component of the Department of Veterans Affairs may use and disclose protected health information to components of the Department that determine eligibility for or entitlement to, or that provide, benefits under the laws administered by the Secretary of Veterans Affairs.

(iv) Foreign military personnel. A covered entity may use and disclose the protected health information of individuals who are foreign military personnel to their appropriate foreign military authority for the same purposes for which uses and disclosures are permitted for Armed Forces personnel under the notice published in the Federal Register pursuant to paragraph (k)(1)(i) of this section.

(2) National security and intelligence activities. A covered entity may disclose protected health information to authorized federal officials for the conduct of lawful intelligence, counter-intelligence, and other national security activities authorized by the National Security Act (50 U.S.C. 401, et seq.) and implementing authority (e.g., Executive Order 12333).

(3) Protective services for the President and others. A covered entity may disclose protected health information to authorized Federal officials for the provision of protective services to the President or other persons authorized by 18 U.S.C. 3056 or to foreign heads of state or other persons authorized by 22 U.S.C. 2709(a)(3), or for the conduct of investigations authorized by 18 U.S.C. 871 and 879.

(4) Medical suitability determinations. A covered entity that is a component of the Department of State may use protected health information to make medical suitability determinations and may disclose whether or not the individual was determined to be medically suitable to the officials in the Department of State who need access to such information for the following purposes:

(i) For the purpose of a required security clearance conducted pursuant to Executive Orders 10450 and 12968;

(ii) As necessary to determine worldwide availability or availability for mandatory service abroad under sections 101(a)(4) and 504 of the Foreign Service Act; or

(iii) For a family to accompany a Foreign Service member abroad, consistent with section 101(b)(5) and 904 of the Foreign Service Act.

(5) Correctional institutions and other law enforcement custodial situations. (i) Permitted disclosures. A covered entity may disclose to a correctional institution or a law enforcement official having lawful custody of an inmate or other individual protected health information about such inmate or individual, if the correctional institution or such law enforcement official represents that such protected health information is necessary for:

(A) The provision of health care to such individuals;

(B) The health and safety of such individual or other inmates;

(C) The health and safety of the officers or employees of or others at the correctional institution;

(D) The health and safety of such individuals and officers or other persons responsible for the transporting of inmates or their transfer from one institution, facility, or setting to another;

(E) Law enforcement on the premises of the correctional institution; or

(F) The administration and maintenance of the safety, security, and good order of the correctional institution.

(ii) Permitted uses. A covered entity that is a correctional institution may use protected health information of individuals who are inmates for any purpose for which such protected health information may be disclosed.

(iii) No application after release. For the purposes of this provision, an individual is no longer an inmate when released on parole, probation, supervised release, or otherwise is no longer in lawful custody.

(6) Covered entities that are government programs providing public benefits. (i) A health plan that is a government program providing public benefits may disclose protected health information relating to eligibility for or enrollment in the health plan to another agency administering a government program providing public benefits if the sharing of eligibility or enrollment information among such government agencies or the maintenance of such information in a single or combined data system accessible to all such government agencies is required or expressly authorized by statute or regulation.

(ii) A covered entity that is a government agency administering a government program providing public benefits may disclose protected health information relating to the program to another covered entity that is a government agency administering a government program providing public benefits if the programs serve the same or similar populations and the disclosure of protected health information is necessary to coordinate the covered functions of such programs or to improve administration and management relating to the covered functions of such programs.

(7) National Instant Criminal Background Check System. A covered  entity may use or disclose protected health information for purposes of reporting to the National Instant Criminal Background Check System the identity of an individual who is prohibited from possessing a firearm under 18 U.S.C. 922(g)(4), provided the covered entity:

(i) Is a State agency or other entity that is, or contains an entity that is:

(A) An entity designated by the State to report, or which collects information for purposes of reporting, on behalf of the State, to the National Instant Criminal Background Check System; or

(B) A court, board, commission, or other lawful authority that makes the commitment or adjudication that causes an individual to become subject to 18 U.S.C. 922(g)(4); and

(ii) Discloses the information only to:

(A) The National Instant Criminal Background Check System; or

(B) An entity designated by the State to report, or which collects information for purposes of reporting, on behalf of the State, to the National Instant Criminal Background Check System; and

(iii)(A) Discloses only the limited demographic and certain other information needed for purposes of reporting to the National Instant Criminal Background Check System; and

(B) Does not disclose diagnostic or clinical information for such purposes.

[Federal Register text and commentary regarding the National Instant Criminal Background Check System and this section (k)(7) exception]

 

HHS Description and Commentary From the January 2013 Amendments
Uses and Disclosures For Which Consent, an Authorization, or Opportunity to Agree or Object is Not Required: Uses and Disclosures for Specialized Government Functions

 

At § 164.512(k)(1)(ii), we proposed to replace the word “Transportation” with “Homeland Security.” The language regarding a component of the Department of Transportation was included to refer to the Coast Guard; however, the Coast Guard was transferred to the Department of Homeland Security in 2003.

 

At § 164.512(k)(5), which permits a covered entity to disclose to a correctional institution or law enforcement official having lawful custody of an inmate or other individual protected health information about the inmate or individual in certain necessary situations, we proposed to replace the word “and” after the semicolon in paragraph (i)(E) with the word “or.” The intent of § 164.512(k)(5)(i) is not that the existence of all of the conditions is necessary to permit the disclosure, but rather that the existence of any would permit the disclosure.

 

HHS Description From the Original Rulemaking
Uses and Disclosures For Which Consent, an Authorization, or Opportunity to Agree or Object is Not Required: Uses and Disclosures for Specialized Government Functions

 

Application to Military Services

In the NPRM we would have permitted a covered entity providing health care to Armed Forces personnel to use and disclose protected health information for activities deemed necessary by appropriate military command authorities to assure the proper execution of the military mission, where the appropriate military authority had published by notice in the Federal Register (In the NPRM, we proposed that the Department of Defense would publish this Federal Register notice in the future.) The final rule takes a similar approach while making some modifications to the NPRM. One modification concerns the information that will be required in the Federal Register notice. The NPRM would have required a listing of (i) appropriate military command authorities; (ii) the circumstances for which use or disclosure without individual authorization would be required; and (iii) activities for which such use or disclosure would occur in order to assure proper execution of the military mission. In the final rule, we eliminate the third category and also slightly modify language in the second category to read: “the purposes for which the protected health information may be used or disclosed.”

An additional modification concerns the rule's application to foreign military and diplomatic personnel. The NPRM would have excluded foreign diplomatic and military personnel, as well as their dependents, from the proposed definition of “individual,” thereby excluding any protected health information created about these personnel from the NPRM's privacy protections. Foreign military and diplomatic personnel affected by this provision include, for example, allied military personnel who are in the United States for training. The final rule applies a more limited exemption to foreign military personnel only (Foreign diplomatic personnel will have the same protections granted to all other individuals under the rule). Under the final rule, foreign military personnel are not excluded from the definition of “individual.” Covered entities will be able to use and disclose protected health information of foreign military personnel to their appropriate foreign military authority for the same purposes for which uses and disclosures are permitted for U.S. Armed Forces personnel under the notice to be published in the Federal Register. Foreign military personnel do have the same rights of access, notice, right to request privacy protection, copying, amendment, and accounting as do other individuals pursuant to §§ 164.520-164.526 (sections on access, notice, right to request privacy protection for protected health information, amendment, inspection, copying) of the rule.

The NPRM likewise would have exempted overseas foreign national beneficiaries from the proposed rule's requirements by excluding them from the definition of “individual.” Under the final rule, these beneficiaries no longer are exempt from the definition of “individual.” However, the rule's provisions do not apply to the individually identifiable health information of overseas foreign nationals who receive care provided by the Department of Defense, other federal agencies, or by non-governmental organizations incident to U.S. sponsored missions or operations.

The final rule includes a new provision to address separation or discharge from military service. The preamble to the NPRM noted that upon completion of individuals' military service, DOD and the Department of Transportation routinely transfer entire military service records, including protected health information to the Department of Veterans Affairs so that the file can be retrieved quickly if the individuals or their dependents apply for veterans benefits. The NPRM would have required consent for such transfers. The final rule no longer requires consent in such situations. Thus, under the final rule, a covered entity that is a component of DOD or the Department of Transportation may disclose to DVA the protected health information of an Armed Forces member upon separation or discharge from military service for the purpose of a determination by DVA of the individual's eligibility for or entitlement to benefits under laws administered by the Secretary of Veterans Affairs.

Department of Veterans Affairs

Under the NPRM, a covered entity that is a component of the Department of Veterans Affairs could have used and disclosed protected health information to other components of the Department that determine eligibility for, or entitlement to, or that provide benefits under the laws administered by the Secretary of Veterans Affairs. In the final rule, we retain this approach.

Application to Intelligence Community

The NPRM would have provided an exemption from its proposed requirements to the intelligence community. As defined in section 4 of the National Security Act, 50 U.S.C. 401a, the intelligence community includes: the Office of the Director of Central Intelligence Agency; the Office of the Deputy Director of Central Intelligence; the National Intelligence Council and other such offices as the Director may designate; the Central Intelligence Agency; the National Security Agency; the Defense Intelligence Agency; the National Imagery and Mapping Agency ; the National Reconnaissance Office; other offices within the DOD for the collection of specialized national intelligence through reconnaissance programs; the intelligence elements of the Army, the Navy, the Air Force, the Marine Corps, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Department of the Treasury, and the Department of Energy; the Bureau of Intelligence and Research of the Department of State; and such other elements of any other department or agency as may be designated by the President, or designated jointly by the Director of Central Intelligence and the head of the department or agency concerned, as an element of the intelligence community. It would have allowed a covered entity to use without individual authorization protected health information of employees of the intelligence community, and of their dependents, if such dependents were being considered for posting abroad. The final rule does not include such an exemption. Rather, the final rule does not except intelligence community employees and their dependents from the general rule requiring an authorization in order for protected health information to be used and disclosed.

National Security and Intelligence Activities

The NPRM included a provision, in § 164.510(f) – Disclosure for Law Enforcement Purposes – that would allow covered entities to disclose protected health information without consent for the conduct of lawful intelligence activities under the National Security Act, and in connection with providing protective services to the President or to foreign heads of state pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 3056 and 22 U.S.C. 2709(a)(3) respectively. The final rule preserves these exemptions, with slight modifications, but moves them from proposed § 164.510(f) to § 164.512(k). It also divides this area into two paragraphs – one called "National Security and Intelligence Activities" and the second called "Protective services for the President and Others."

The final rule, with modifications, allows a covered entity to disclose protected health information to an authorized federal official for the conduct of lawful intelligence, counter-intelligence, and other national security activities authorized by the National Security Act and implementing authority (e.g., Executive Order 1233). The references to “counter-intelligence and other national security activities” are new to the final rule. The reference to “implementing authority (e.g. Executive Order 12333)” is also new. The final rule also adds specificity to the provision on protective services. It states that a covered entity may disclose protected health information to authorized federal officials for the provision of protective services to the President or other persons as authorized by 18 U.S.C. 3056, or to foreign heads of state or other persons as authorized by 22 U.S.C. 2709(a)(3), or for the conduct of investigations authorized by 18 U.S.C. 871 and 879.

Application to the State Department

The final rule creates a narrower exemption for Department of State for uses and disclosures of protected health information (1) for purposes of a required security clearance conducted pursuant to Executive Orders 10450 and 12698; (2) as necessary to meet the requirements of determining worldwide availability or availability for mandatory service abroad under Sections 101(a)(4) and 504 of the Foreign Service Act; and (3) for a family member to accompany a Foreign Service Officer abroad, consistent with Section 101(b)(5) and 904 of the Foreign Service Act.

Regarding security clearances, nothing prevents any employer from requiring that individuals provide authorization for the purpose of obtaining a security clearance. For the Department of the State, however, the final rule provides a limited exemption that allows a component of the Department of State without an authorization to (1) use protected health information to make medical suitability determinations and (2) to disclose whether or not the individual was determined to be medically suitable to authorized officials in the Department of State for the purpose of a security clearance investigation conducted pursuant to Executive Order 10450 and 12698.

Sections 101(a)(4) and 504 of the Foreign Service Act require that Foreign Service members be available to serve in assignments throughout the world. The final rule permits disclosures to officials who need protected health information to determine availability for duty worldwide.

Section 101(b)(5) of the Foreign Service Act requires the Department of State to mitigate the impact of hardships, disruptions, and other unusual conditions on families of Foreign Service Officers. Section 904 requires the Department to establish a health care program to promote and maintain the physical and mental health of Foreign Service member family members. The final rule permits disclosure of protected health information to officials who need protected health information for a family member to accompany a Foreign Service member abroad.

This exemption does not permit the disclosure of specific medical conditions, diagnoses, or other specific medical information. It permits only the disclosure of the limited information needed to determine whether the individual should be granted a security clearance or whether the Foreign Service member of his or her family members should be posted to a certain overseas assignment.

Application to Correctional Facilities

The NPRM would have excluded the individually identifiable health information of correctional facility inmates and detention facility detainees from the definition of protected health information. Thus, none of the NPRM's proposed privacy protections would have applied to correctional facility inmates or to detention facility detainees while they were in these facilities or after they had been released.

The final rule takes a different approach. First, to clarify that we are referring to individuals who are incarcerated in correctional facilities that are part of the criminal justice system or in the lawful custody of a law enforcement official – and not to individuals who are “detained” for non-criminal reasons, for example, in psychiatric institutions – § 164.512(k) covers disclosure of protected health information to correctional institutions or law enforcement officials having such lawful custody. In addition, where a covered health care provider is also a health care component of a correctional institution, the final rule permits the covered entity to use protected health information in all cases in which it is permitted to disclose such information.

We define correctional institution as defined pursuant to 42 U.S.C. 13725(b)(1), as a “prison, jail, reformatory, work farm, detention center, or halfway house, or any other similar institution designed for the confinement or rehabilitation of criminal offenders.” The rules regarding disclosure and use of protected health information specified in § 164.512(k) cover individuals who are in transitional homes, and other facilities in which they are required by law to remain for correctional reasons and from which they are not allowed to leave. This section also covers individuals who are confined to psychiatric institutions for correctional reasons and who are not allowed to leave; however, it does not apply to disclosure of information about individuals in psychiatric institutions for treatment purposes only, who are not there due to a crime or under a mandate from the criminal justice system. The disclosure rules described in this section do not cover release of protected health information about individuals in pretrial release, probation, or on parole, such persons are not considered to be incarcerated in a correctional facility.

As described in § 164.512(k), correctional facility inmates' individually identifiable health information is not excluded from the definition of protected health information. When individuals are released from correctional facilities, they will have the same privacy rights that apply to all other individuals under this rule.

Section 164.512(k) of the final rule states that while individuals are in a correctional facility or in the lawful custody of a law enforcement official, covered entities (for example, the prison's clinic) can use or disclose protected health information about these individuals without authorization to the correctional facility or the law enforcement official having custody as necessary for: (1) the provision of health care to such individuals; (2) the health and safety of such individual or other inmates; (3) the health and safety of the officers of employees of or others at the correctional institution; and (4) the health and safety of such individuals and officers or other persons responsible for the transporting of inmates or their transfer from one institution or facility to another; (5) law enforcement on the premises of the correctional institution; and (6) the administration and maintenance of the safety, security, and good order of the correctional institution. This section is intended to allow, for example, a prison's doctor to disclose to a van driver transporting a criminal that the individual is a diabetic and frequently has seizures, as well as information about the appropriate action to take if the individual has a seizure while he or she is being transported.

We permit covered entities to disclose protected health information about these individuals if the correctional institution or law enforcement official represents that the protected health information is necessary for these purposes. Under 164.514(h), a covered entity may reasonably rely on the representation of such public officials.

Application to Public Benefits Programs Required to Share Eligibility Information

We create a new provision for covered entities that are a government program providing public benefits. This provision allows the following disclosures of protected health information.

First, where other law requires or expressly authorizes information relating to the eligibility for, or enrollment in more than one public program to be shared among such public programs and/or maintained in a single or combined data system, a public agency that is administering a health plan may maintain such a data base and may disclose information relating to such eligibility or enrollment in the health plan to the extent authorized by such other law.

Where another public entity has determined that the appropriate balance between the need for efficient administration of public programs and public funds and individuals' privacy interests is to allow information sharing for these limited purposes, we do not upset that determination. For example, section 1137 of the Social Security Act requires a variety of public programs, including the Social Security program, state medicaid programs, the food stamp program, certain unemployment compensation programs, and others, to participate in a joint income and eligibility verification system. Similarly, section 222 of the Social Security Act requires the Social Security Administration to provide information to certain state vocational rehabilitation programs for eligibility purposes. In some instances, it is a covered entity that first collects or creates the information that is then disclosed for these systems. We do not prohibit those disclosures.

This does not authorize these entities to share information for claims determinations or ongoing administration of these public programs. This provision is limited to the agencies and activities described above.

Second, § 164.512(k)(6) permits a covered entity that is a government agency administering a government program providing public benefits to disclose protected health information relating to the program to another covered entity that is a government agency administering a government program providing public benefits if the programs serve the same or similar populations and the disclosure of protected health information is necessary to coordinate the covered functions of such programs.

The second provision permits covered entities that are government program providing public benefits that serve the same or similar populations to share protected health information for the purposes of coordinating covered functions of the programs and for general management and administration relating to the covered functions of the programs. Often, similar government health programs are administered by different government agencies. For example, in some states, the Medicaid program and the State Children's Health Insurance Program are administered by different agencies, although they serve similar populations.

Many states coordinate eligibility for these two programs, and sometimes offer services through the same delivery systems and contracts. This provision would permit the covered entities administering these programs to share protected health information of program participants to coordinate enrollment and services and to generally improve the health care operations of the programs. We note that this provision does not authorize the agencies to use or disclose the protected health information that is shared for purposes other than as provided for in this paragraph.

 

HHS Response to Comments Received From the Original Rulemaking
Uses and Disclosures For Which Consent, an Authorization, or Opportunity to Agree or Object is Not Required: Uses and Disclosures for Specialized Government Functions

 

Military Purposes

Armed Forces Personnel and Veterans

Comment: A few comments opposed the proposed rule's provisions on the military, believing that they were too broad. Although acknowledging that the Armed Forces may have legitimate needs for access to protected health data, the commenters believed that the rule failed to provide adequate procedural protections to individuals. A few comments said that, except in limited circumstances or emergencies, covered entities should be required to obtain authorization before using or disclosing protected health information. A few comments also expressed concern over the proposed rule's lack of specific safeguards to protect the health information of victims of domestic violence and abuse. While the commenters said they understood why the military needed access to health information, they did not believe the rule would impede such access by providing safeguards for victims of domestic violence or abuse.

Response: We note that the military comprises a unique society and that members of the Armed Forces do not have the same freedoms as do civilians. The Supreme Court held in Goldman v. Weinberger, 475 US 503 (1986), that the military must be able to command its members to sacrifice a great many freedoms enjoyed by civilians and to endure certain limits on the freedoms they do enjoy. The Supreme Court also held in Parker v. Levy, 417 US 733 (1974), that the different character of the military community and its mission required a different application of Constitutional protections. What is permissible in the civilian world may be impermissible in the military. We also note that individuals entering military service are aware that they will not have, and enjoy, the same rights as others.

The proposed rule would have authorized covered entities to use and disclose protected health information about armed forces personnel only for activities considered necessary by appropriate military command authorities to assure the proper execution of the military mission. In order for the military mission to be achieved and maintained, military command authorities need protected health information to make determinations regarding individuals' medical fitness to perform assigned military duties.

The proposed rule required the Department of Defense (DoD) to publish a notice in the Federal Register identifying its intended uses and disclosures of protected health information, and we have retained this approach in the final rule. This notice will serve to limit command authorities' access to protected health information to circumstances in which disclosure of protected health information is necessary to assure proper execution of the military mission.

With respect to comments regarding the lack of procedural safeguards for individuals, including those who are victims of domestic violence and abuse, we note that the rule does not provide new authority for covered entities providing health care to individuals who are Armed Forces personnel to use and disclose protected health information. Rather, the rule allows the Armed Forces to use and disclose such information only for those military mission purposes which will be published separately in the Federal Register. In addition, we note that the Privacy Act of 1974, as implemented by the DoD, provides numerous protections to individuals.

We modify the proposal to publish privacy rules for the military in the Federal Register. The NPRM would have required this notice to include information on the activities for which use or disclosure of protected health information would occur in order to assure proper execution of the military mission. We believe that this proposed portion of the notice is redundant and thus unnecessary in light the rule's application to military services. In the final rule, we eliminate this proposed section of the notice, and we state that health plans and covered health care providers may use and disclose protected health information of Armed Forces personnel for activities considered necessary by appropriate military command authorities to assure the proper execution of a military mission, where the appropriate military authority has published a Federal Register notice identifying: (1) the appropriate military command authorities; and (2) the purposes for which protected health information may be used or disclosed.

Comment: A few commenters, members of the affected beneficiary class, which numbers approximately 2.6 million (active duty and reserve military personnel), opposed proposed § 164.510(m) because it would have allowed a non-governmental covered entity to provide protected health information without authorization to the military. These commenters were concerned that military officials could use the information as the basis for taking action against individuals.

Response: The Secretary does not have the authority under HIPAA to regulate the military's re-use or re-disclosure of protected health information obtained from health plans and covered health care providers. This provision's primary intent is to ensure that proper military command authorities can obtain needed medical information held by covered entities so that they can make appropriate determinations regarding the individual's medical fitness or suitability for military service. Determination that an individual is not medically qualified for military service would lead to his or her discharge from or rejection for service in the military. Such actions are necessary in order for the Armed Forces to have medically qualified personnel, ready to perform assigned duties. Medically unqualified personnel not only jeopardize the possible success of a mission, but also pose an unacceptable risk or danger to others. We have allowed such uses and disclosures for military activities because it is in the Nation's interest.

Separation or Discharge from Military Service

Comment: The preamble to the NPRM solicited comments on the proposal to permit the DoD to transfer, without authorization, a service member's military medical record to the Department of Veterans Affairs (DVA) when the individual completed his or her term of military service. A few commenters opposed the proposal, believing that authorization should be obtained. Both the DoD and the DVA supported the proposal, noting that transfer allows the DVA to make timely determinations as to whether a veteran is eligible for benefits under programs administered by the DVA.

Response: We note that the transfer program was established based on recommendations by Congress, veterans groups, and veterans; that it has existed for many years; and that there has been no objection to, or problems associated with, the program. We also note that the Department of Transportation (DoT) and the Department of Veterans Affairs operate an analogous transfer program with respect to United States Coast Guard personnel, who comprise part of the U.S. Armed Forces. The protected health information involved the DoD/DVA transfer program is being disclosed and used for a limited purpose that directly benefits the individual. This information is covered by, and thus subject to the protections of, the Privacy Act. For these reasons, the final rule retains the DoD/DVA transfer program proposed in the NPRM. In addition, we expand the NPRM's proposed provisions regarding the Department of Veterans Affairs to include the DoT/DVA program, to authorize the continued transfer of these records.

Comment: The Department of Veterans Affairs supported the NPRM's proposal to allow it to use and disclose protected health information among components of the Department so that it could make determinations on whether an individual was entitled to benefits under laws administered by the Department. Some commenters said that the permissible disclosure pursuant to this section appeared to be sufficiently narrow in scope, to respond to an apparent need. Some commenters also said that the DVA's ability to make benefit determinations would be hampered if an individual declined to authorize release of his or her protected health information. A few commenters, however, questioned whether such an exchange of information currently occurs between the components. A few commenters also believed the proposed rule should be expanded to permit sharing of information with other agencies that administer benefit programs.

Response: The final rule retains the NPRM's approach regarding use and disclosure of protected health information without authorization among components of the DVA for the purpose of making eligibility determinations based on commenters' assessment that the provision was narrow in scope and that an alternative approach could negatively affect benefit determinations for veterans. We modify the NPRM language slightly, to clarify that it refers to a health plan or covered health care provider that is a component of the DVA. These component entities may use or disclose protected health information without authorization among various components of the Department to determine eligibility for or entitlement to veterans' benefits. The final rule does not expand the scope of permissible disclosures under this provision to allow the DVA to share such information with other agencies. Other agencies may obtain this information only with authorization, subject to the requirements of § 164.508.

Foreign Military Personnel

Comments: A few comments opposed the exclusion of foreign diplomatic and military personnel from coverage under the rule. These commenters said that the mechanisms that would be necessary to identify these personnel for the purpose of exempting them from the rule's standards would create significant administrative difficulties. In addition, they believed that this provision would have prohibited covered entities from making disclosures allowed under the rule. Some commenters were concerned that implementation of the proposed provision would result in disparate treatment of foreign military and diplomatic personnel with regard to other laws, and that it would allow exploitation of these individuals' health information. These commenters believed that the proposed rule's exclusion of foreign military and diplomatic personnel was unnecessarily broad and that it should be narrowed to meet a perceived need. Finally, they noted that the proposed exclusion could be affected by the European Union's Data Protection Directive.

Response: We agree with the commenters' statement that the NPRM's exclusion of foreign military and diplomatic personnel from the rule's provisions was overly broad. Thus, the final rule's protections apply to these personnel. The rule covers foreign military personnel under the same provisions that apply to all other members of the U.S. Armed Forces, as described above. Foreign military authorities need access to protected health information for the same reason as must United States military authorities: to ensure that members of the armed services are medically qualified to perform their assigned duties. Under the final rule, foreign diplomatic personnel have the same protections as other individuals.

Intelligence Community

Comments: A few commenters opposed the NPRM's provisions regarding protected health information of intelligence community employees and their dependents being considered for postings overseas, on the grounds that the scope of permissible disclosure without authorization was too broad. While acknowledging that the intelligence community may have legitimate needs for its employees' protected health information, the commenters believed that the NPRM failed to provide adequate procedural protections for the employees' information. A few comments also said that the intelligence community should be able to obtain their employees' health information only with authorization. In addition, commenters said that the intelligence community should make disclosure of protected health information a condition of employment.

Response: Again, we agree that the NPRM's provision allowing disclosure of the protected health information of intelligence community employees without authorization was overly broad. Thus we eliminate it in the final rule. The intelligence community can obtain this information with authorization (pursuant to § 164.508), for example, when employees or their family members are being considered for an oversees assignment and when individuals are applying for employment with or seeking a contract from an intelligence community agency.

National Security and Intelligence Activities and Protective Services for the President and Others

Comment: A number of comments opposed the proposed "intelligence and national security activities" provision of the law enforcement section (§ 164.510(f)(4)), suggesting that it was overly broad. These commenters were concerned that the provision lacked sufficient procedural safeguards to prevent abuse of protected health information. The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and the Department of Defense (DoD) also expressed concern over the provision's scope. The agencies said that if implemented as written, the provision would have failed to accomplish fully its intended purpose of allowing the disclosure of protected health information to officials carrying out intelligence and national security activities other than law enforcement activities. The CIA and DoD believed that the provision should be moved to another section of the rule, possibly to proposed § 164.510(m) on specialized classes, so that authorized intelligence and national security officials could obtain individuals' protected health information without authorization when lawfully engaged in intelligence and national security activities.

Response: In the final rule, we clarify that this provision does not provide new authority for intelligence and national security officials to acquire health information that they otherwise would not be able to obtain. Furthermore, the rule does not confer new authority for intelligence, national security, or Presidential protective service activities. Rather, the activities permissible under this section are limited to those authorized under current law and regulation (e.g., for intelligence activities, 50 U.S.C. 401, et seq., Executive Order 12333, and agency implementing regulatory authorities). For example, the provision regarding national security activities pertains only to foreign persons that are the subjects of legitimate and lawful intelligence, counterintelligence, or other national security activities. In addition, the provision regarding protective services pertains only to those persons who are the subjects of legitimate investigations for threatening or otherwise exhibiting an inappropriate direction of interest toward U.S. Secret Service protectees pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 871, 879, and 3056. Finally, the rule leaves intact the existing State Department regulations that strictly limit the disclosure of health information pertaining to employees (e.g., Privacy Issuances at State-24 Medical Records).

We believe that because intelligence/national security activities and Presidential/other protective service activities are discrete functions serving different purposes, they should be treated consistently but separately under the rule. For example, medical information is used as a complement to other investigative data that are pertinent to conducting comprehensive threat assessment and risk prevention activities pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 3056. In addition, information on the health of world leaders is important for the provision of protective services and other functions. Thus, § 164.512(k) of the final rule includes separate subsections for national security/intelligence activities and for disclosures related to protective services to the President and others.

We note that the rule does not require or compel a health plan or covered health care provider to disclose protected health information. Rather, two subsections of § 164.512(k) allow covered entities to disclose information for intelligence and national security activities and for protective services to the President and others only to authorized federal officials conducting these activities, when such officials are performing functions authorized by law.

We agree with DoD and CIA that the NPRM, by including these provisions in the law enforcement section (proposed § 164.510(f)), would have allowed covered entities to disclose protected health information for national security, intelligence, and Presidential protective activities only to law enforcement officials. We recognize that many officials authorized by law to carry out intelligence, national security, and Presidential protective functions are not law enforcement officials. Therefore, the final rule allows covered entities to disclose protected health information pursuant to this provision not only to law enforcement officials, but to all federal officials authorized by law to carry out the relevant activities. In addition, we remove this provision from the law enforcement section and include it in § 164.512(k) on uses and disclosures for specialized government functions

Medical Suitability Determinations

Comment: A few comments opposed the NPRM's provision allowing the Department of State to use protected health information for medical clearance determinations. These commenters believed that the scope of permissible disclosures under the proposed provision was too broad. While acknowledging that the Department may have legitimate needs for access to protected health data, the commenters believed that implementation of the proposed provision would not have provided adequate procedural safeguards for the affected State Department employees. A few comments said that the State Department should be able to obtain protected health information for medical clearance determinations only with authorization. A few comments also said that the Department should be able to disclose such information only when required for national security purposes. Some commenters believed that the State Department should be subject to the Federal Register notice requirement that the NPRM would have applied to the Department of Defense. A few comments also opposed the proposed provision on the basis that it would conflict with the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 or that it appeared to represent an invitation to discriminate against individuals with mental disorders.

Response: We agree with commenters who believed that the NPRM's provision regarding the State Department's use of protected health information without authorization was unnecessarily broad. Therefore, in the final rule, we restrict significantly the scope of protected health information that the State Department may use and disclose without authorization. First, we allow health plans and covered health care providers that are a component of the State Department to use and disclose protected health information without authorization when making medical suitability determinations for security clearance purposes. For the purposes of a security investigation, these components may disclose to authorized State Department officials whether or not the individual was determined to be medically suitable. Furthermore, we note that the rule does not confer authority on the Department to disclose such information that it did not previously possess. The Department remains subject to applicable law regarding such disclosures, including the Rehabilitation Act of 1973.

The preamble to the NPRM solicited comment on whether there was a need to add national security determinations under Executive Order 10450 to the rule's provision on State Department uses and disclosures of protected health information for security determinations. While we did not receive comment on this issue, we believe that a limited addition is warranted and appropriate. Executive Orders 10450 and 12968 direct Executive branch agencies to make certain determinations regarding whether their employees' access to classified information is consistent with the national security interests of the United States. Specifically, the Executive Orders state that access to classified information shall be granted only to those individuals whose personal and professional history affirmatively indicates, inter alia, strength of character, trustworthiness, reliability, and sound judgment. In reviewing the personal history of an individual, Executive branch agencies may investigate and consider any matter, including a mental health issue or other medical condition, that relates directly to any of the enumerated factors.

In the vast majority of cases, Executive agencies require their security clearance investigators to obtain the individual's express consent in the form of a medical release, pursuant to which the agency can conduct its background investigation and obtain any necessary health information. This rule does not interfere with agencies' ability to require medical releases for purposes of security clearances under these Executive Orders.

In the case of the Department of State, however, it may be impracticable or infeasible to obtain an employee's authorization when exigent circumstances arise overseas. For example, when a Foreign Service Officer is serving at an overseas post and he or she develops a critical medical problem which may or may not require a medical evacuation or other equally severe response, the Department's medical staff have access to the employee's medical records for the purpose of making a medical suitability determination under Executive Orders 10450 and 12968. To restrict the Department's access to information at such a crucial time due to a lack of employee authorization leaves the Department no option but to suspend the employee's security clearance. This action automatically would result in an immediate forced departure from post, which negatively would affect both the Department, due to the unexpected loss of personnel, and the individual, due to the fact that a forced departure can have a long-term impact on his or her career in the Foreign Service.

For this reason, the rule contains a limited security clearance exemption for the Department of State. The exemption allows the Department's own medical staff to continue to have access to an employee's medical file for the purpose of making a medical suitability determination for security purposes. The medical staff can convey a simple “yes” or “no” response to those individuals conducting the security investigation within the Department. In this way, the Department is able to make security determinations in exigent circumstances without disclosing any specific medical information to any employees other than the medical personnel who otherwise have routine access to these same medical records in an everyday non-security context.

Second, and similarly, the final rule establishes a similar system for disclosures of protected health information necessary to determine worldwide availability or availability for mandatory service abroad under Sections 101(a)(4) and 504 of the Foreign Service Act. The Act requires that Foreign Service members be suitable for posting throughout the world and for certain specific assignments. For this reason, we permit a limited exemption to serve the purposes of the statute. Again, the medical staff can convey availability determinations to State Department officials who need to know if certain Foreign Service members are available to serve at post.

Third, and finally, the final rule recognizes the special statutory obligations that the State Department has regarding family members of Foreign Service members under Sections 101(b)(5) and 904 of the Foreign Service Act. Section 101(b)(5) of the Foreign Service Act requires the Department of State to mitigate the impact of hardships, disruptions, and other unusual conditions on families of Foreign Service Officers. Section 904 requires the Department to establish a health care program to promote and maintain the physical and mental health of Foreign Service member family members. The final rule permits disclosure of protected health information to officials who need protected health information to determine whether a family member can accompany a Foreign Service member abroad.

Given the limited applicability of the rule, we believe it is not necessary for the State Department to publish a notice in the Federal Register to identify the purposes for which the information may be used or disclosed. The final rule identifies these purposes, as described above.

 

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