Tag Archives: florida hospital

Orlando Health Law Attorneys to Speak at Florida Hospital

Attorneys from The Health Law Firm will be presenting a seminar on contracts to Florida Hospital’s family medicine residents and medical students on Wednesday, December 7, 2011 at Florida Hospital East Orlando. The lecture aims to provide information on contract negotiations and employee contract review.

This seminar is part of a series that will be presented to Florida Hospital’s family medicine department by The Health Law Firm‘s attorneys. Other lecture topics will include top legal concerns common to doctors, such as navigating a Department of Health complaint.

Based in Altamonte Springs, Fla., The Health Law Firm concentrates in representing health care providers, exclusively. Services provided by the firm include reviewing and negotiating contracts, defense of professional licensing cases, representation in investigations, defense in credentialing matters, Medicare and Medicaid audits, formation of corporations and limited liability companies (LLCs), Board of Medicine hearings, peer review actions, Department of Health investigations, pain management and pain medicine physician and clinic defense, representation of medical students, and other matters of Health Law and legal representation of health care professionals.

For more information about The Health Law Firm visit http://www.thehealthlawfirm.com.

Florida Hospital Recovering from Privacy Breach

As a health care provider, keeping patient medical records confidential is a fundamental aspect of the job description. Within those records, the most private details of a person’s life are revealed, details, that if leaked, may ruin the reputation of the patient and the health care provider.

According to the Orlando Sentinel, Florida Hospital is currently trying to recover from the damaging effects of a breach of its medical electronic records. Three employees were to blame for “inappropriate access” to the records, all nonmedical personnel.

No motive has yet been attributed to the breach, which occurred between January 2010 and August 2011. All 2,252 patients whose records may have been involved in this incident are being notified.

Though Florida Hospital screens employees before hiring, a spokesperson for the hospital believes that “nonessential” personnel should have restricted access to records.

With a federal push to have more and more records be transferred to an electronic format, health care providers need to take every precaution to make sure these files remain private. A privacy breach not only endangers patients, but can result in a slew of consequences for the organization responsible for the breach.

Perhaps the larger issue at hand is whether or not electronic medical records are safer than their paper counterparts. While electronic records may be more efficient, they can be easier to access than a paper file safely guarded under lock and key. However, the switch to electronic files seems inevitable, so the keepers need to continually evaluate and adjust security measures to protect this top secret information.

For more information about confidentiality of medical records visit our website.