Did this postal worker discriminate and/or Violate HIPPA Privacy Law
I would like to know if the postal carrier has to say the actual name of the narcotic to be found in violation of the HIPAA privacy law? And also did she indeed discriminate against the handicapped? His parcel was delivered today after I called the P.O. to find out that a neighbor who also works for the postal service told me that delivery to our address had been stopped by her supervisor who was embarrassed about the situation after seeing me a slight built 60 yr old and a 38 yr old MS patient in a wheelchair! This supervisor also brought the mail they had on hold and apologized for the postal worker's behavior and false report that resulted in my son to suffer withdrawal symptoms and our mail delivery halted as a result. Her indiscretion possibly has alerted my neighbors that my son has narcotics in the home and she has put us in danger of breaking and entering if someone is so inclined because they want these narcotics. I don't think knowing the name of the narcotic is relevant so is it? She said his name and that the narcotic came from the VA. Following is an amendment to the HIPAA privacy law that includes businesses. The P.O. is a business and the carrier an agent of that business. Forgive my typo in the title. "2013 Final Omnibus Rule Update[edit]
"In January 2013, HIPAA was updated via the Final Omnibus Rule.[33] Included in changes were updates to the Security Rule and Breach Notification portions of the HITECH Act. The greatest changes relate to the expansion of requirements to include business associates, where only covered entities had originally been held to uphold these sections of the law.
Additionally, the definition of 'significant harm' to an individual in the analysis of a breach was updated to provide more scrutiny to covered entities with the intent of disclosing more breaches which had been previously gone unreported. Previously an organization needed proof that harm had occurred whereas now they must prove the counter, that harm had not occurred.
Protection of PHI was changed from indefinite to 50 years after death. More severe penalties were also approved for violation of PHI privacy"