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CHIP Letter to Key Senate Democrats: Don't Delay
HIPAA
Believing that if passed, legislation to delay HIPAA may in effect
kill it, the Coalition for Health Information Policy (CHIP) has
sent a letter to key Senate Democrats asking them to oppose legislation
and other efforts to delay the Transactions and Code Sets rule.
The full text of the letter follows:
June 18, 2001
The Honorable Charles E. Grassley
United States Senate
Washington, DC 20510
Dear Senator Grassley:
The Coalition for Health Information Policy (CHIP) represents a
broad array of professionals and organizations involved in the development,
use, management, and security of health information systems, across
all sectors of the healthcare industry. CHIP strongly supports the
timely implementation of the health information standards called
for by Sec. 262 and Sec. 264 of the Health Insurance Portability
and Accountability Act (HIPAA). We write to you today to express
our opposition to proposals that would delay the compliance deadline
for the Transaction Standards regulation, which is scheduled to
be fully effective in October 2002. Specifically, we ask that you
not support S. 836, which was introduced by Senator Craig last month,
either as a stand-alone bill or as part of some larger legislation.
The membership of the Coalition for Health Information Policy (CHIP)
includes: the American Health Information Management Association
(AHIMA) - 41,000 professionals who manage health records; the American
Medical Informatics Association (AMIA) - 3,700 information systems
developers and academic physicians; the Center for Healthcare Information
Management (CHIM) - 140 healthcare information technology companies;
and the Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society (HIMSS)
- with more than 43 chapters and 12,000 members who are healthcare
professionals working in healthcare organizations worldwide. Members
of our associations facilitate the control, flow, and storage of
billions of pieces of health information each day. We are strongly
committed to protecting the standardization, accuracy, security
and privacy of that information, and at the same time cognizant
of the legitimate and appropriate uses of health data to improve
both individual care and the health of our nation as a whole.
The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)
called for the development and implementation of a comprehensive
set of health information standards in order to meet the goals of
administrative simplification. These included transaction standards
and code sets for the electronic exchange of health information,
as well as regulations intended to protect the security and privacy
of individually identifiable health information. As you know, the
Department of Health and Human Services has worked closely with
the healthcare industry for more than five years to develop the
HIPAA standards. While the several rules that ultimately will govern
the treatment of health information are interrelated, CHIP does
not believe that they must be implemented as a package. Rather,
in our view the Transaction and Code Set standards represent a major
and essential first step toward the standardized exchange of health
information and data definitions, that can be planned for within
the announced implementation timeline, and modified successively
as the remaining transaction-related HIPAA rules are released.
As noted above, the associations of CHIP are very much concerned
with the potential impact of S. 836. Not only would the bill unnecessarily
delay implementation of the transaction and Code Set standards,
but its open-ended language could frustrate the implementation of
other HIPAA rules and prevent us from reaching the goals of administrative
simplification: improving the quality of health care, increasing
access to health services, and decreasing costs.
HIPAA provides for additions and modifications to any standards
adopted under its administrative simplification provisions, including
the Transaction Standards, and the Department of Health and Human
Services in collaboration with private standard setting organizations
has put into place a series of processes under which covered entities
can request necessary changes and clarifications. In regard to the
Transaction Standards rule, CHIP is confident that these mechanisms,
when combined with genuine efforts to move toward compliance on
the part of covered entities, will allow implementation of the Transaction
Standards by October 2002 as scheduled. Further, we believe that
HIPAA allows HHS the necessary flexibility to provide guidance to
covered entities that are making a good faith effort to implement
the standards and even to permit additional time to reach full compliance
with the rule.
Thank you for considering our views regarding the inadvisability
of further delays of the HIPAA administrative simplification rules.
Members of our associations would be happy to brief your staff on
the technical and operational implementation of the Transaction
Standards, and such related issues as the need to resolve the use
of local codes by payers, including the Medicare and Medicaid programs
in particular. We encourage you to contact our Washington representative,
Doug Peddicord, at (202) 543-7460 to arrange such a meeting.
Sincerely,
Linda L. Kloss
Vice President/CEO
AHIMA |
Dennis Reynolds
Executive Director
AMIA
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Carla Smith
CEO
CHIM |
H. Stephen Lieber
President/CEO
HIMSS |
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