› Home
› About Us
› Contact Us
› My Account
› Order Form
› W9
› e-Books
› Download e-Book Reader
› Get an RSS Feed of New Titles
› Audio Conferences
› Best Sellers
› Bargain Box
› Behavioral Healthcare
› Coaching
› Coding
› Coming Soon
› Community Health
› Compliance
› Consumer-Driven
› Credentialing
› Cultural Diversity
› Directories & Databases
› Disease Management
› Disease Management Dimensions
› e-Books
› eHealthcare
› Emergency Medicine
› Financial Management
› Grant Funding
› Health Care Management
› Health Information Management
› Health Risk Assessments
› Healthcare Trends
› HIN Special Reports
› HIPAA
› Hospice
› Hospital
› Hospitalist
› Human Resources
› Infection Control
› Information Technology
› Long-Term Care
› Managed Care
› Marketing
› Medicaid
› Medical Guidelines
› Medical Home
› Medical Practice
› Medical Records
› Medicare
› Occupational Health
› On Demand
› Pay for Performance
› Pharmaceutical
› Physician Quality Reporting Initiative
› Physician Organizations
› Podcasts
› Predictive Modeling
› Prospective Payment System
› Quality Improvement
› Reimbursement
› Safety
› Transparency
› Webinars
› Wellness
› What's New
› Women's Healthcare
› 
› Product Sitemap
› Terms and Conditions
Subscribe to the Free
'Healthcare Business Weekly Update' e-Newsletter and receive the latest trends, news and analysis in healthcare.
Email:

Click here to view this week's issue
Balancing Privacy with Public Health Surveillance In Public Health Emergencies
Balancing Privacy with Public Health Surveillance In Public Health Emergencies
 
 Price
Your Price:
$235.00
 
Quantity  
 Description

Misunderstandings among healthcare providers and public health authorities over sharing data threaten the nation's ability to respond to public health emergencies. The response after Hurricanes Katrina and Rita revealed that many providers and others still do not understand or fear sharing patient data.

The confusion complicates the response to a wide range of public health threats, including the threatened flu pandemic.

Balancing Privacy with Public Health Surveillance in Public Health Emergencies can help healthcare professionals respond to public health emergencies.

This timely briefing will reduce the uncertainty over sharing patient data with public health authorities in preparing for and addressing emergencies.

Participants will learn:

  • Privacy principles that apply in disaster response and emergencies;
  • Policies to govern data sharing to prevent or stem public health emergencies;
  • HIPAA effects on sharing of patient data in emergency preparation and response;
  • How state laws require the sharing of patient data with public health authorities;
  • The importance of organizing business associates;
  • Ways to balance syndromic surveillance with privacy; and more

Who Should Attend

  • Privacy Officers
  • Security Officers
  • Public Health Professionals
  • Emergency Response Professionals
  • Compliance Officers
  • Healthcare Administrators
  • Healthcare Counsels
  • CIOs
  • HIM Professionals
  • Healthcare Attorneys
  • Healthcare Consultants

The Faculty

James G. Hodge, Jr., J.D., LL.M. is an Associate Professor at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health where he teaches Health Information Privacy Law and Policy and Bioethics and the Law. Professor Hodge also is the Executive Director of the Center for Law and the Public's Health at Georgetown and Johns Hopkins Universities.

He has drafted (with others) several public health law reform initiatives, including the Model State Public Health Information Privacy Act, the Model State Emergency Health Powers Act, and the Turning Point Model State Public Health Act.

His diverse, funded projects include current and prior work on: the legal framework underlying the use of volunteer health professionals during emergencies; the compilation, study, and analysis of state genetics laws and policies as part of a multi-year NIH-funded project; legal and ethical distinctions between public health practice and research; and public health law case studies in VA, MI, NH, OR, NE, AK, MT, MI, and DE. He is a national expert on public health information privacy law and ethics, having consulted CDC on its creation of a Health Information Privacy Office and with DHHS, CSTE, APHL, FDA, CMS, and OHRP and others on privacy issues.

Dan Drociuk, MT(ASCP), MSPH is an epidemiologist and the Director, Bioterrorism Surveillance and Response Program, South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control.

Previously employed with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in the National Immunization Program, Mr. Drociuk conducted research into influenza and pneumococcal vaccination rates among Medicare recipients.


Publication Date: November 2005

 
 Related Items
New Opportunities and Approaches for Patient De-Identification in Healthcare
$260.00
Buy
Global Health Leadership and Management
$57.95
Buy
  
 
Be the first to review this item
Email this page to a friend
Wellness Coaching for Lasting Lifestyle Change
Expanding Market Share: A Guide to Blues Plan Strategies and Alliances
Case Studies from Diabetes Medical Home Pilots: Key Processes, Tools, Metrics and Outcomes
Framing the Medical Home Model of Care: Blueprint from Early Adopters
Managing the Chronic Pain Patient: Strategies To Improve Quality of Life and Reduce Excessive Healthcare Utilization, a 90-minute webinar on June 11, 2008
Copyright © 2008 Healthcare Intelligence Network. All Rights Reserved. Shopping Cart powered by 3DCart.