By April 14, Health and Human Services Secretary
Tommy Thompson must decide whether to implement the "medical privacy" rules
submitted in the waning days of the Clinton administration. The rules, published in the
Federal Register on December 28, 2000, mandate that every doctor and health care provider
turn patient records over to the HHS and other federal agencies for
"safekeeping" -- regardless of whether patients consent.
The government could then share those records with third parties such as insurance
companies, private marketers, and even police agencies.
The result? Soon millions of government bureaucrats, clerks in insurance companies, HMO's
and even drug marketing companies will have access to your confidential medical records
without your permission. Specifically, this regulation would:
* Allow the disclosure, without patient consent, of all medical records for
"public health surveillance activities" and dozens of other purposes. Providers
could refuse to treat people who refuse to surrender their records.
* Allow private insurance companies to access the medical information and compile it into
a database.
* Permit police agencies to access medical records without a search warrant.
* Give the government the right to access the private notes of a psychotherapist.
* Allow foreign government officials to see Americans' health records, as long as the U.S.
government claims it is doing it for a "national health purpose."
* Assign every American a "unique patient identifier," whether you want one or
not, by working in conjunction with the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability
Act. The number would be similar to a Social Security number for medical transactions -
and would make accessing an individual's medical records as easy as running a credit
check.
* Give direct marketers access to medical records, and allow pharmacies to share
prescription records "for the purpose of marketing health-related products and
services" -- all without patient consent.
* Prevent patients involved in health research projects from accessing their own medical
records.
The government claims it is doing this to "protect" the privacy of your medical
records. But if these regulations go into effect, you can kiss your medical privacy
goodbye.
In a free society, the government has no reason to have copies of your private medical
records, and politicians have no right to release your medical records to others without
your consent.
But that's exactly what's going to happen, unless we can generate enough opposition to
persuade Congress to stop these regulations from going into effect April 14th.
Please forward this e-mail to any friends, family, co-workers, neighbors, or other people
you know personally who may be interested. However, please don't send it indiscriminately;
spam will only hurt our campaign.
Then go to our web page (NOTE OF FORCES: to the right of the screen) and sign the
petition. Thank you.