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United States Government Accountability Office: 

GAO: 

Testimony: 

Before the Subcommittee on Oversight of Government Management, the 
Federal Workforce, and the District of Columbia; Committee on Homeland 
Security and Governmental Affairs, U.S. Senate: 

For Release on Delivery: 

Expected at 2:30 p.m. EST Thursday, February 1, 2007: 

Health Information Technology: 

Early Efforts Initiated but Comprehensive Privacy Approach Needed for 
National Strategy: 

Statement of: 

Linda D. Koontz: 
Director, Information Management Issues: 

David A. Powner: 
Director, Information Technology Management Issues: 

GAO-07-400T: 

Abbreviations: 

AHIC: American Health Information Community: 

Health IT: health information technology: 

HIPAA: Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996: 

HHS: Health and Human Services: 

NCVHS: National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics: 

NHIN: Nationwide Health Information Network: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-07-400T, a testimony before the Committee on Homeland 
Security and Governmental Affairs, U.S. Senate 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

In April 2004, President Bush called for the Department of Health and 
Human Services (HHS) to develop and implement a strategic plan to guide 
the nationwide implementation of health IT. The plan is to recommend 
methods to ensure the privacy of electronic health information. 

GAO was asked to summarize its report that is being released today. The 
report describes the steps HHS is taking to ensure privacy protection 
as part of its national health IT strategy and identifies challenges 
associated with protecting electronic health information exchanged 
within a nationwide health information network. 

What GAO Found: 

HHS and its Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT have 
initiated actions to identify solutions for protecting personal health 
information through several contracts and with two health information 
advisory committees. For example, in late 2005, HHS awarded several 
health IT contracts that include requirements for addressing the 
privacy of personal health information exchanged within a nationwide 
health information exchange network. Its privacy and security solutions 
contractor is to assess the organization-level privacy- and security-
related policies, practices, laws, and regulations that affect 
interoperable health information exchange. Additionally, in June 2006, 
the National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics made 
recommendations to the Secretary of HHS on protecting the privacy of 
personal health information within a nationwide health information 
network and in August 2006, the American Health Information Community 
convened a work group to address privacy and security policy issues for 
nationwide health information exchange. While these activities are 
intended to address aspects of key principles for protecting the 
privacy of health information, HHS is in the early stages of its 
efforts and has therefore not yet defined an overall approach for 
integrating its various privacy-related initiatives and addressing key 
privacy principles, nor has it defined milestones for integrating the 
results of these activities. 

GAO identified key challenges associated with protecting electronic 
personal health information in four areas (see table). 

Table: Challenges to Exchanging Electronic Health Information: 

Areas: Understanding and resolving legal and policy issues; 
* Resolving uncertainties regarding the extent of federal privacy 
protection required of various organizations;
* Understanding and resolving data sharing issues introduced by varying 
state privacy laws and organization-level practices;
* Reaching agreements on differing interpretations and applications of 
the HIPAA privacy and security rules; 
* Determining liability and enforcing sanctions in case of breaches of 
confidentiality. 

Areas: Ensuring appropriate disclosure; 
* Determining the minimum data necessary that can be disclosed in order 
for requesters to accomplish their intended purposes; 
* Determining the best way to allow patients to participate in and 
consent to electronic health information exchange; 
* Educating consumers about the extent to which their consent to use 
and disclose health information applies. 

Areas: Ensuring individuals' rights to request access and amendments to 
health information; 
* Ensuring that individuals understand that they have rights to request 
access and amendments to their own health information; 
* Ensuring that individuals’ amendments are properly made and tracked 
across multiple locations. 

Areas: Implementing adequate security measures for protecting health 
information; 
* Determining and implementing adequate techniques for authenticating 
requesters of health information; 
* Implementing proper access controls and maintaining adequate audit 
trails for monitoring access to health data; 
* Protecting data stored on portable devices and transmitted between 
business partners. 

Source: GAO analysis of information provided by state-level information 
exchange organizations, federal health care providers, and health IT 
professional associations. 

[End of table] 

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO recommended that HHS define and implement an overall privacy 
approach that identifies milestones for integrating the outcomes of its 
initiatives, ensures that key privacy principles are fully addressed, 
and addresses challenges associated with the nationwide exchange of 
health information. In its comments, HHS disagreed with this 
recommendation and stated that it has established a comprehensive 
privacy approach. However, GAO believes that an overall approach for 
integrating HHS’s initiatives has not been fully defined and 
implemented. 

[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-07-400T]. 

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
the link above. For more information, contact Linda D. Koontz, (202) 
512-6240, koontzl@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Mr. Chairman, Senator Voinovich, Members of the Subcommittee: 

We appreciate the opportunity to participate in today's hearing on 
privacy initiatives associated with the Department of Health and Human 
Services's (HHS) national health information technology (IT) strategy. 
Key privacy principles for protecting personal information have been in 
existence for years and provide a foundation for privacy laws, 
practices, and policies. Those privacy principles are reflected in the 
provisions of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act 
of 1996 and its implementing regulations, which define the 
circumstances under which an individual's protected health information 
may be used or disclosed. 

In April 2004, President Bush issued an executive order that called for 
the development and implementation of a strategic plan to guide the 
nationwide implementation of interoperable health IT in both the public 
and private sectors.[Footnote 1] The plan is to address privacy and 
security issues related to interoperable health IT and recommend 
methods to ensure appropriate authorization, authentication, and 
encryption of data for transmission over the Internet. The order also 
established the position of the National Coordinator for Health 
Information Technology within HHS as the government official 
responsible for developing and implementing this strategic plan. 

As requested, our testimony summarizes a report being released today 
that (1) describes the steps HHS is taking to ensure privacy protection 
as part of the national health IT strategy and (2) identifies 
challenges associated with meeting requirements for protecting personal 
health information within a nationwide health information 
network.[Footnote 2] In preparing for this testimony, we relied on our 
work supporting the report, which contains a detailed overview of our 
scope and methodology. The work on which this testimony is based was 
performed in accordance with generally accepted government auditing 
standards. 

Results in Brief: 

HHS and its Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT have 
initiated actions to study the protection of personal health 
information through the work of several contracts, the National 
Committee on Vital and Health Statistics,[Footnote 3] and the American 
Health Information Community.[Footnote 4] For example: 

* In late 2005, HHS awarded several health IT contracts that include 
requirements for addressing the privacy of personal health information 
exchanged within an electronic nationwide health information network. 

* In summer 2006, HHS's contractor for privacy and security solutions 
selected 33 states and Puerto Rico as locations in which to perform 
assessments of organization-level privacy-and security-related 
policies, practices, laws, and regulations that affect interoperable 
health information exchange and to propose privacy and security 
protections that permit interoperability. 

* In June 2006, the National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics 
provided a report to the Secretary of HHS that made recommendations on 
protecting the privacy of personal health information within a 
nationwide health information network. 

* In August 2006, the American Health Information Community also 
convened a work group to address privacy and security policy issues for 
nationwide health information exchange. 

HHS and its Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT intend to 
use the results of these activities to identify technology and policy 
solutions for protecting personal health information as part of their 
continuing efforts to complete a national strategy to guide the 
nationwide implementation of health IT. While these activities are 
intended to address aspects of key principles for protecting health 
information, HHS is in the early stages of its efforts and has not yet 
defined an overall approach for integrating its various privacy-related 
initiatives and addressing key privacy principles. In addition, 
milestones for integrating the results of these activities do not yet 
exist. Until HHS defines an integration approach and milestones for 
completing these steps, its overall approach for ensuring the privacy 
and protection of personal health information exchanged throughout a 
nationwide network will remain unclear. 

Key challenges associated with protecting personal health information 
are understanding and resolving legal and policy issues, such as those 
related to variations in states' privacy laws; ensuring that only the 
minimum amount of information necessary is disclosed to only those 
entities authorized to receive the information; ensuring individuals' 
rights to request access and amendments to their own health 
information; and implementing adequate security measures for protecting 
health information. 

We recommend in our report that the Secretary of HHS define and 
implement an overall approach for protecting health information as part 
of the strategic plan called for by the President. This approach should 
(1) identify milestones for integrating the outcomes of its privacy- 
related initiatives, (2) ensure that key privacy principles are fully 
addressed, and (3) address key challenges associated with the 
nationwide exchange of health information. 

In written comments, HHS disagreed with our recommendation and referred 
to the department's "comprehensive and integrated approach for ensuring 
the privacy and security of health information within nationwide health 
information exchange." However, an overall approach for integrating the 
department's various privacy-related initiatives has not been fully 
defined and implemented. We acknowledge in our report that HHS has 
established a strategic objective to protect consumer privacy along 
with two specific strategies for meeting this objective. Our report 
also acknowledges the key efforts that HHS has initiated to address 
this objective. While progress has been made initiating these efforts, 
much work remains before they are completed and the outcomes of the 
various efforts are integrated. Thus, we recommend that HHS define and 
implement a comprehensive privacy approach that includes milestones for 
integration, identifies the entity responsible for integrating the 
outcomes of its privacy-related initiatives, addresses key privacy 
principles, and ensures that challenges are addressed in order to meet 
the department's objective to protect the privacy of health information 
exchanged within a nationwide health information network. 

Background: 

According to the Institute of Medicine, the federal government has a 
central role in shaping nearly all aspects of the health care industry 
as a regulator, purchaser, health care provider, and sponsor of 
research, education, and training. According to HHS, federal agencies 
fund more than a third of the nation's total health care costs. Given 
the level of the federal government's participation in providing health 
care, it has been urged to take a leadership role in driving change to 
improve the quality and effectiveness of medical care in the United 
States, including expanded adoption of IT. 

In April 2004, President Bush called for the widespread adoption of 
interoperable electronic health records within 10 years and issued an 
executive order that established the position of the National 
Coordinator for Health Information Technology within HHS as the 
government official responsible for the development and execution of a 
strategic plan to guide the nationwide implementation of interoperable 
health IT in both the public and private sectors.[Footnote 5] In July 
2004, HHS released The Decade of Health Information Technology: 
Delivering Consumer-centric and Information-rich Health Care-- 
Framework for Strategic Action.[Footnote 6] This framework described 
goals for achieving nationwide interoperability of health IT and 
actions to be taken by both the public and private sectors in 
implementing a strategy. HHS's Office of the National Coordinator for 
Health IT updated the framework's goals in June 2006 and included an 
objective for protecting consumer privacy. It identified two specific 
strategies for meeting this objective--(1) support the development and 
implementation of appropriate privacy and security policies, practices, 
and standards for electronic health information exchange and (2) 
develop and support policies to protect against discrimination based on 
personal health information such as denial of medical insurance or 
employment. 

In July 2004, we testified on the benefits that effective 
implementation of IT can bring to the health care industry and the need 
for HHS to provide continued leadership, clear direction, and 
mechanisms to monitor progress in order to bring about measurable 
improvements.[Footnote 7] Since then, we have reported or testified on 
several occasions on HHS's efforts to define its national strategy for 
health IT. We have recommended that HHS develop the detailed plans and 
milestones needed to ensure that its goals are met and HHS agreed with 
our recommendation and has taken some steps to define more detailed 
plans.[Footnote 8] In our report and testimonies, we have described a 
number of actions that HHS, through the Office of the National 
Coordinator for Health IT, has taken toward accelerating the use of IT 
to transform the health care industry,[Footnote 9] including the 
development of its framework for strategic action. We have also 
described the Office of the National Coordinator's continuing efforts 
to work with other federal agencies to revise and refine the goals and 
strategies identified in its initial framework. The current draft 
framework--The Office of the National Coordinator: Goals, Objectives, 
and Strategies--identifies objectives for accomplishing each of four 
goals, along with 32 high-level strategies for meeting the objectives, 
including the two strategies for protecting consumer privacy. 

Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996: 

Federal health care reform initiatives of the early-to mid-1990s were 
inspired in part by public concern about the privacy of personal 
medical information as the use of health IT increased. Congress, 
recognizing that benefits and efficiencies could be gained by the use 
of information technology in health care, also recognized the need for 
comprehensive federal medical privacy protections and consequently 
passed the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 
(HIPAA). This law provided for the Secretary of HHS to establish the 
first broadly applicable federal privacy and security protections 
designed to protect individual health care information. 

HIPAA required the Secretary of HHS to promulgate regulatory standards 
to protect certain personal health information held by covered 
entities, which are certain health plans, health care providers, and 
health care clearinghouses.[Footnote 10] It also required the Secretary 
of HHS to adopt security standards for covered entities that maintain 
or transmit health information to maintain reasonable and appropriate 
safeguards. The law requires that covered entities take certain 
measures to ensure the confidentiality and integrity of the information 
and to protect it against reasonably anticipated unauthorized use or 
disclosure and threats or hazards to its security. 

HIPAA provides authority to the Secretary to enforce these standards. 
The Secretary has delegated administration and enforcement of privacy 
standards to the department's Office for Civil Rights and enforcement 
of the security standards to the department's Centers for Medicare and 
Medicaid Services. 

Most states have statutes that in varying degrees protect the privacy 
of personal health information. HIPAA recognizes this and specifically 
provides that its implementing regulations do not preempt contrary 
provisions of state law if the state laws impose more stringent 
requirements, standards, or specifications than the federal privacy 
rule. In this way, the law and its implementing rules establish a 
baseline of mandatory minimum privacy protections and define basic 
principles for protecting personal health information. 

The Secretary of HHS first issued HIPAA's Privacy Rule in December 
2000, following public notice and comment, but later modified the rule 
in August 2002. Subsequent to the issuance of the Privacy Rule, the 
Secretary issued the Security Rule in February 2003 to safeguard 
electronic protected health information and help ensure that covered 
entities have proper security controls in place to provide assurance 
that the information is protected from unwarranted or unintentional 
disclosure. 

The Privacy Rule reflects basic privacy principles for ensuring the 
protection of personal health information. Table 1 summarizes these 
principles. 

Table 1: Key Privacy Principles in HIPAA's Privacy Rule: 

HIPAA Privacy Rule principle. 

Uses and disclosures; 
Provides limits to the circumstances in which an individual's protected 
health information may be used or disclosed by covered entities and 
provides for accounting of certain disclosures; requires covered 
entities to make reasonable efforts to disclose or use only the minimum 
information necessary to accomplish the intended purpose for the uses, 
disclosures, or requests, with certain exceptions such as for treatment 
or as required by law. 

Notice; 
Requires most covered entities to provide a notice of their privacy 
practices including how personal health information may be used and 
disclosed. 

Access; 
Establishes individuals' rights to review and obtain a copy of their 
protected health information held in a designated record set.[A]. 

Security[B]; 
Requires covered entities to safeguard protected health information 
from inappropriate use or disclosure. 

Amendments; 
Gives individuals the right to request from covered entities changes to 
inaccurate or incomplete protected health information held in a 
designated record set.[A]. 

Administrative requirements; 
Requires covered entities to analyze their own needs and implement 
solutions appropriate for their own environment based on a basic set of 
requirements for which they are accountable. 

Authorization; 
Requires covered entities to obtain the individual's written 
authorization for uses and disclosures of personal health information 
with certain exceptions, such as for treatment, payment, and health 
care operations, or as required by law. Covered entities may choose to 
obtain the individual's consent to use or disclose protected health 
information to carry out treatment, payment, or health care operations, 
but are not required to do so. 

Source: GAO analysis of HIPAA Privacy Rule. 

[A] According to the Privacy Rule, a designated record set is a group 
of records maintained by or for a covered entity that are (1) the 
medical records and billing records about individuals maintained by or 
for a covered health care provider; (2) the enrollment, payment, claims 
adjudication, and case or medical management record systems maintained 
by or for a health plan; or (3) used, in whole or in part, by or for 
the covered entity to make decisions about individuals. 

[B] The Security Rule further defines safeguards that covered entities 
must implement to provide assurance that health information is 
protected from inappropriate use and disclosure. 

[End of table] 

HHS Has Initiated Actions to Identify Solutions for Protecting Personal 
Health Information but Has Not Defined an Overall Approach for 
Addressing Privacy: 

HHS and its Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT have 
initiated actions to identify solutions for protecting health 
information. Specifically, HHS awarded several health IT contracts that 
include requirements for developing solutions that comply with federal 
privacy and security requirements, consulted with the National 
Committee on Vital and Health Statistics (NCVHS) to develop 
recommendations regarding privacy and confidentiality in the Nationwide 
Health Information Network, and formed the American Health Information 
Community (AHIC) Confidentiality, Privacy, and Security Workgroup to 
frame privacy and security policy issues and identify viable options or 
processes to address these issues. The Office of the National 
Coordinator for Health IT intends to use the results of these 
activities to identify technology and policy solutions for protecting 
personal health information as part of its continuing efforts to 
complete a national strategy to guide the nationwide implementation of 
health IT. However, HHS is in the early stages of identifying solutions 
for protecting personal health information and has not yet defined an 
overall approach for integrating its various privacy-related 
initiatives and for addressing key privacy principles. 

HHS's Contracts Are to Address Privacy and Security Policy and 
Standards for Nationwide Health Information Exchange: 

HHS awarded four major health IT contracts in 2005 intended to advance 
the nationwide exchange of health information--Privacy and Security 
Solutions for Interoperable Health Information Exchange, Standards 
Harmonization Process for Health IT, Nationwide Health Information 
Network Prototypes, and Compliance Certification Process for Health IT. 
These contracts include requirements for developing solutions that 
comply with federal privacy requirements. The contract for privacy and 
security solutions is intended to specifically address privacy and 
security policies and practices that affect nationwide health 
information exchange. 

HHS's contract for privacy and security solutions is intended to 
provide a nationwide synthesis of information to inform privacy and 
security policymaking at federal, state, and local levels and the 
Nationwide Health Information Network prototype solutions for 
supporting health information exchange across the nation. In summer 
2006, the privacy and security solutions contractor selected 34 states 
and territories as locations in which to perform assessments of 
organization-level privacy-and security-related policies and practices 
that affect interoperable electronic health information exchange and 
their bases, including laws and regulations. The contractor is 
supporting the states and territories as they (1) assess variations in 
organization-level business policies and state laws that affect health 
information exchange, (2) identify and propose solutions while 
preserving the privacy and security requirements of applicable federal 
and state laws, and (3) develop detailed plans to implement solutions. 

The privacy and security solutions contractor is to develop a 
nationwide report that synthesizes and summarizes the variations 
identified, the proposed solutions, and the steps that states and 
territories are taking to implement their solutions. It is also to 
deliver an interim report to address policies and practices followed in 
nine domains of interest: (1) user and entity authentication, (2) 
authorization and access controls, (3) patient and provider 
identification to match identities, (4) information transmission 
security or exchange protocols (encryption, etc.), (5) information 
protections to prevent improper modification of records, (6) 
information audits that record and monitor the activity of health 
information systems, (7) administrative or physical security safeguards 
required to implement a comprehensive security platform for health IT, 
(8) state law restrictions about information types and classes and the 
solutions by which electronic personal health information can be viewed 
and exchanged, and (9) information use and disclosure policies that 
arise as health care entities share clinical health information 
electronically. These domains of interest address the use and 
disclosure and security privacy principles. 

The National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics Made 
Recommendations for Addressing Privacy and Security within a Nationwide 
Health Information Network: 

In June 2006, NCVHS, a key national health information advisory 
committee, presented to the Secretary of HHS a report recommending 
actions regarding privacy and confidentiality in the Nationwide Health 
Information Network. The recommendations cover topics that are, 
according to the committee, central to challenges for protecting health 
information privacy in a national health information exchange 
environment. The recommendations address aspects of key privacy 
principles including (1) the role of individuals in making decisions 
about the use of their personal health information, (2) policies for 
controlling disclosures across a nationwide health information network, 
(3) regulatory issues such as jurisdiction and enforcement, (4) use of 
information by non-health care entities, and (5) establishing and 
maintaining the public trust that is needed to ensure the success of a 
nationwide health information network. The recommendations are being 
evaluated by the AHIC work groups, the Certification Commission for 
Health IT, the Health Information Technology Standards Panel, and other 
HHS partners. 

In October 2006, the committee recommended that HIPAA privacy 
protections be extended beyond the current definition of covered 
entities to include other entities that handle personal health 
information. It also called on HHS to create policies and procedures to 
accurately match patients with their health records and to require 
functionality that allows patient or physician privacy preferences to 
follow records regardless of location. The committee intends to 
continue to update and refine its recommendations as the architecture 
and requirements of the network advance. 

The American Health Information Community's Confidentiality, Privacy, 
and Security Workgroup Is to Develop Recommendations to Establish a 
Privacy Policy Framework: 

AHIC, a commission that provides input and recommendations to HHS on 
nationwide health IT, formed the Confidentiality, Privacy, and Security 
Workgroup in July 2006 to frame privacy and security policy issues and 
to solicit broad public input to identify viable options or processes 
to address these issues.[Footnote 11] The recommendations to be 
developed by this work group are intended to establish an initial 
policy framework and address issues including methods of patient 
identification, methods of authentication, mechanisms to ensure data 
integrity, methods for controlling access to personal health 
information, policies for breaches of personal health information 
confidentiality, guidelines and processes to determine appropriate 
secondary uses of data, and a scope of work for a long-term independent 
advisory body on privacy and security policies. 

The work group has defined two initial work areas--identity 
proofing[Footnote 12] and user authentication[Footnote 13]--as initial 
steps necessary to protect confidentiality and security. These two work 
areas address the security principle. Last month, the work group 
presented recommendations on performing patient identity proofing to 
AHIC. The work group intends to address other key privacy principles, 
including, but not limited to maintaining data integrity and control of 
access. It plans to address policies for breaches of confidentiality 
and guidelines and processes for determining appropriate secondary uses 
of health information, an aspect of the use and disclosure privacy 
principle. 

HHS's Collective Initiatives Are Intended to Address Aspects of Key 
Privacy Principles, but an Overall Approach for Addressing Privacy Has 
Not Been Defined: 

HHS has taken steps intended to address aspects of key privacy 
principles through its contracts and with advice and recommendations 
from its two key health IT advisory committees. For example, the 
privacy and security solutions contract is intended to address all the 
key privacy principles in HIPAA. Additionally, the uses and disclosures 
principle is to be further addressed through the advisory committees' 
recommendations and guidance. The security principle is to be addressed 
through the definition of functional requirements for a nationwide 
health information network, the definition of security criteria for 
certifying electronic health record products, the identification of 
information exchange standards, and recommendations from the advisory 
committees regarding, among other things, methods to establish and 
confirm a person's identity. The committees have also made 
recommendations for addressing authorization for uses and disclosure of 
health information and intend to develop guidelines for determining 
appropriate secondary uses of data. 

HHS has made some progress toward protecting personal health 
information through its various privacy-related initiatives. For 
example, during the past 2 years, HHS has defined initial criteria and 
procedures for certifying electronic health records, resulting in the 
certification of 35 IT vendor products. In January 2007, HHS 
contractors presented 4 initial prototypes of a Nationwide Health 
Information Network (NHIN). However, the other contracts have not yet 
produced final results. For example, the privacy and security solutions 
contractor has not yet reported its assessment of state and 
organizational policy variations. This report is due on March 31, 2007. 
Additionally, HHS has not accepted or agreed to implement the 
recommendations made in June 2006 by the NCVHS, and the AHIC Privacy, 
Security, and Confidentiality Workgroup is in the very early stages of 
efforts that are intended to result in privacy policies for nationwide 
health information exchange. 

HHS is in the early phases of identifying solutions for safeguarding 
personal health information exchanged through a nationwide health 
information network and has not yet defined an approach for integrating 
its various efforts or for fully addressing key privacy principles. For 
example, milestones for integrating the results of its various privacy- 
related initiatives and resolving differences and inconsistencies have 
not been defined, and it has not been determined which entity 
participating in HHS's privacy-related activities is responsible for 
integrating these various initiatives and the extent to which their 
results will address key privacy principles. Until HHS defines an 
integration approach and milestones for completing these steps, its 
overall approach for ensuring the privacy and protection of personal 
health information exchanged throughout a nationwide network will 
remain unclear. 

The Health Care Industry Faces Challenges in Protecting Electronic 
Health Information: 

The increased use of information technology to exchange electronic 
health information introduces challenges to protecting individuals' 
personal health information. In our report, we identify and summarize 
key challenges described by health information exchange organizations: 
understanding and resolving legal and policy issues, particularly those 
resulting from varying state laws and policies; ensuring appropriate 
disclosures of the minimum amount of health information needed; 
ensuring individuals' rights to request access to and amendments of 
health information to ensure it is correct; and implementing adequate 
security measures for protecting health information. Table 2 summarizes 
these challenges. 

Table 2: Challenges to Exchanging Electronic Health Information: 

Areas: Understanding and resolving legal and policy issues; 
* Resolving uncertainties regarding the extent of federal privacy 
protection required of various organizations;
* Understanding and resolving data sharing issues introduced by varying 
state privacy laws and organization-level practices;
* Reaching agreements on differing interpretations and applications of 
the HIPAA privacy and security rules; 
* Determining liability and enforcing sanctions in case of breaches of 
confidentiality. 

Areas: Ensuring appropriate disclosure; 
* Determining the minimum data necessary that can be disclosed in order 
for requesters to accomplish their intended purposes; 
* Determining the best way to allow patients to participate in and 
consent to electronic health information exchange; 
* Educating consumers about the extent to which their consent to use 
and disclose health information applies. 

Areas: Ensuring individuals' rights to request access and amendments to 
health information; 
* Ensuring that individuals understand that they have rights to request 
access and amendments to their own health information; 
* Ensuring that individuals’ amendments are properly made and tracked 
across multiple locations. 

Areas: Implementing adequate security measures for protecting health 
information; 
* Determining and implementing adequate techniques for authenticating 
requesters of health information; 
* Implementing proper access controls and maintaining adequate audit 
trails for monitoring access to health data; 
* Protecting data stored on portable devices and transmitted between 
business partners. 

Source: GAO analysis of information provided by state-level information 
exchange organizations, federal health care providers, and health IT 
professional associations. 

[End of table] 

Understanding and Resolving Legal and Policy Issues: 

Health information exchange organizations bring together multiple and 
diverse health care providers, including physicians, pharmacies, 
hospitals, and clinics that may be subject to varying legal and policy 
requirements for protecting health information. As health information 
exchange expands across state lines, organizations are challenged with 
understanding and resolving data-sharing issues introduced by varying 
state privacy laws. HHS recognized that sharing health information 
among entities in states with varying laws introduces challenges and 
intends to identify variations in state laws that affect privacy and 
security practices through the privacy and security solutions contract 
that it awarded in 2005. 

Ensuring Appropriate Disclosure: 

Several organizations described issues associated with ensuring 
appropriate disclosure, such as determining the minimum data necessary 
that can be disclosed in order for requesters to accomplish the 
intended purposes for the use of the health information. For example, 
dieticians and health claims processors do not need access to complete 
health records, whereas treating physicians generally do. Organizations 
also described issues with obtaining individuals' authorization and 
consent for uses and disclosures of personal health information and 
difficulties with determining the best way to allow individuals to 
participate in and consent to electronic health information exchange. 
In June 2006, NCVHS recommended to the Secretary of HHS that the 
department monitor the development of different approaches and continue 
an open, transparent, and public process to evaluate whether a national 
policy on this issue would be appropriate. 

Ensuring Individuals' Rights to Request Access and Amendments to Health 
Information to Ensure It Is Correct: 

As the exchange of personal health information expands to include 
multiple providers and as individuals' health records include 
increasing amounts of information from many sources, keeping track of 
the origin of specific data and ensuring that incorrect information is 
corrected and removed from future health information exchange could 
become increasingly difficult. Additionally, as health information is 
amended, HIPAA rules require that covered entities make reasonable 
efforts to notify certain providers and other persons that previously 
received the individuals' information. The challenges associated with 
meeting this requirement are expected to become more prevalent as the 
numbers of organizations exchanging health information increases. 

Implementing Adequate Security Measures for Protecting Health 
Information: 

Adequate implementation of security measures is another challenge that 
health information exchange providers must overcome to ensure that 
health information is adequately protected as health information 
exchange expands. For example, user authentication will become more 
difficult when multiple organizations that employ different techniques 
exchange information. The AHIC Confidentiality, Privacy, and Security 
Workgroup recognized this difficulty and identified user authentication 
as one of its initial work areas for protecting confidentiality and 
security. 

Implementation of GAO Recommendations Should Help Ensure that HHS'S 
Goal to Protect Personal Health Information is Met: 

To increase the likelihood that HHS will meet its strategic goal to 
protect personal health information, we recommend in our 
report[Footnote 14] that the Secretary of Health and Human Services 
define and implement an overall approach for protecting health 
information as part of the strategic plan called for by the President. 
This approach should: 

1. Identify milestones and the entity responsible for integrating the 
outcomes of its privacy-related initiatives, including the results of 
its four health IT contracts and recommendations from the NCVHS and 
AHIC advisory committees. 

2. Ensure that key privacy principles in HIPAA are fully addressed. 

3. Address key challenges associated with legal and policy issues, 
disclosure of personal health information, individuals' rights to 
request access and amendments to health information, and security 
measures for protecting health information within a nationwide exchange 
of health information. 

In commenting on a draft of our report, HHS disagreed with our 
recommendation and referred to "the department's comprehensive and 
integrated approach for ensuring the privacy and security of health 
information within nationwide health information exchange." However, an 
overall approach for integrating the department's various privacy- 
related initiatives has not been fully defined and implemented. While 
progress has been made initiating these efforts, much work remains 
before they are completed and the outcomes of the various efforts are 
integrated. HHS specifically disagreed with the need to identify 
milestones and stated that tightly scripted milestones would impede 
HHS's processes and preclude stakeholder dialogue on the direction of 
important policy matters. We disagree and believe that milestones are 
important for setting targets for implementation and for informing 
stakeholders of HHS's plans and goals for protecting personal health 
information as part of its efforts to achieve nationwide implementation 
of health IT. 

HHS did not comment on the need to identify an entity responsible for 
the integration of the department's privacy-related initiatives, nor 
did it provide information regarding an effort to assign responsibility 
for this important activity. HHS neither agreed nor disagreed that its 
approach should address privacy principles and challenges, but stated 
that the department plans to continue to work toward addressing privacy 
principles in HIPAA and that our report appropriately highlights 
efforts to address challenges encountered during electronic health 
information exchange. HHS stated that the department is committed to 
ensuring that health information is protected as part of its efforts to 
achieve nationwide health information exchange. 

In written comments, the Secretary of Veterans Affairs concurred with 
our findings, conclusions, and recommendation to the Secretary of HHS 
and commended our efforts to highlight methods for ensuring the privacy 
of electronic health information. The Department of Defense chose not 
to comment on a draft of the report. 

In summary, concerns about the protection of personal health 
information exchanged electronically within a nationwide health 
information network have increased as the use of health IT and the 
exchange of electronic health information have also increased. HHS and 
its Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT have initiated 
activities that, collectively, are intended to protect health 
information and address aspects of key privacy principles. While 
progress continues to be made through the various initiatives, it 
becomes increasingly important that HHS define a comprehensive approach 
and milestones for integrating its efforts, resolve differences and 
inconsistencies among them, fully address key privacy principles, 
ensure that recommendations from its advisory committees are 
effectively implemented, and sequence the implementation of key 
activities appropriately. 

HHS's current initiatives are intended to address many of the 
challenges that organizations face as the exchange of electronic health 
information expands. However, without a clearly defined approach that 
establishes milestones for integrating efforts and fully addresses key 
privacy principles and the related challenges, it is likely that HHS's 
goal to safeguard personal health information as part of its national 
strategy for health IT will not be met. 

Mr. Chairman, Senator Voinovich, and members of the subcommittee, this 
concludes our statement. We will be happy to answer any questions that 
you or members of the subcommittee may have at this time. 

Contacts and Acknowledgments: 

If you have any questions on matters discussed in this testimony, 
please contact Linda Koontz at (202) 512-6240 or David Powner at (202) 
512-9286, or by e-mail at koontzl@gao.gov or pownerd@gao.gov. Other key 
contributors to this testimony include Mirko J. Dolak, Amanda C. Gill, 
Nancy E. Glover, M. Saad Khan, David F. Plocher, Charles F. Roney, 
Sylvia L. Shanks, Sushmita L. Srikanth, Teresa F. Tucker, and Morgan F. 
Walts. 

FOOTNOTES 

[1] Executive Order 13335, Incentives for the Use of Health Information 
Technology and Establishing the Position of the National Health 
Information Technology Coordinator (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 27, 2004). 

[2] GAO, Health Information Technology: Early Efforts Initiated but 
Comprehensive Privacy Approach Needed for National Strategy, GAO-07-238 
(Washington, D.C.: Jan. 10, 2007). 

[3] The National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics was 
established in 1949 as a public advisory committee that is statutorily 
authorized to advise the Secretary of HHS on health data, statistics, 
and national health information policy, including the implementation of 
health IT standards. 

[4] The American Health Information Community is a federally chartered 
advisory committee made up of representatives from both the public and 
private health care sectors. The community provides input and 
recommendations to HHS on making health records electronic and 
providing assurance that the privacy and security of those records are 
protected. 

[5] Executive Order 13335. 

[6] Department of Health and Human Services, "The Decade of Health 
Information Technology: Delivering Consumer-centric and Information- 
rich Health Care: A Framework for Strategic Action" (Washington, D.C.: 
July 21, 2004). 

[7] GAO, Health Care: National Strategy Needed to Accelerate the 
Implementation of Information Technology, GAO-04-947T (Washington, 
D.C.: July 14, 2004). 

[8] GAO, Health Information Technology: HHS Is Continuing Efforts to 
Define Its National Strategy, GAO-06-1071T (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 1, 
2006). 

[9] GAO, Health Information Technology: HHS Is Taking Steps to Develop 
a National Strategy, GAO-05-628 (Washington, D.C.: May 27, 2005); GAO, 
Health Information Technology: HHS Is Continuing Efforts to Define a 
National Strategy, GAO-06-346T (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 15, 2006); GAO- 
06-1071T. 

[10] HIPAA's protection of health information is limited by the scope 
of its defined terms. "Health information" is defined as any 
information that is created or received by a health care provider, 
health plan, public health authority, employer, life insurer, school or 
university, or health care clearinghouse and related to any physical or 
mental health or condition of an individual, the provision of health 
care to an individual, or any payment for the provision of health care 
to an individual. "Covered entities" are health plans that provide or 
pay for the medical care of individuals, health care providers that 
electronically transmit health information in connection with any of 
the transactions regulated by the statute, and health care 
clearinghouses that receive health information from other entities and 
process or facilitate the processing of that information for those 
entities. Our description of HIPAA's protection of the privacy or 
personal health information is limited accordingly. 

[11] In May 2006, several of the AHIC work groups recommended the 
formation of an additional work group composed of privacy, security, 
clinical, and technology experts from each of the other AHIC work 
groups. The AHIC Confidentiality, Privacy, and Security Workgroup first 
convened in August 2006. 

[12] Identity proofing is the process of providing sufficient 
information (e.g., identity history, credentials, documents) to 
establish and verify a person's identity. Identity proofing already 
takes place throughout many industries, including health care. However, 
a standard methodology does not exist. 

[13] User authentication is the process of confirming a person's 
claimed identity, often used as a way to grant access to data, 
resources, and other network services. While a user name and password 
provide a foundational level of authentication, several other 
techniques, most notably two-factor authentication, have additional 
capabilities. 

[14] GAO-07-238. 

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