All
Help

HIPAA Law Demystified

Overview and practical application of the Health Insurance Portability & Accountability Act

  • Product Number: 2250018P01
  • CLE Credits, earn up to:
    1.5 substantive credits, 0 ethics credits CLE Credit Note
  • Print Brochure
  • Add to Favorites List

Choose Date/Location:

Registration for this program is closed
Also Available:
MP3 Download
MP3 Download Add to Cart
Includes downloadable supporting materials. $175.00; Members $157.50; New Lawyers $87.50 Free for OnlinePass subscribers.
Ondemand Webcast
On Demand Webcast Add to Cart
Includes downloadable supporting materials. $175.00; Members $157.50; New Lawyers $87.50 Free for OnlinePass subscribers.
On Demand video and audio
Related On Demand Videos
See Agenda below to purchase individual video segments from this program. Pricing varies by video length. Member and new lawyer pricing available. Free for OnlinePass subscribers.
  • Product Description
  • Agenda & Materials
  • Faculty
  • Product Description

    Product Description

    HIPAA may be one of the most misunderstood laws in modern American history. The Health Insurance Portability & Accountability Act of 1996 has been improperly invoked for decades. The misconceptions about HIPAA, its purpose, its application, its enforceability, and its exceptions are a source of frustration for many people, lawyers included. Attorneys in many fields are often denied discovery or other forms of documentation under the banner of HIPAA. Even those in the health care field routinely encounter HIPAA-related obstacles that are entirely avoidable.

    Learn about the origin of HIPAA, its history, and its contemporaneous application, including how it has evolved over the past 25 years. Understand what circumstances trigger HIPAA privacy rules as well as the exceptions and interplay between federal HIPAA law and Massachusetts state privacy laws. The speaker illustrates practical application of the law using real-world scenarios. This program is designed for anyone curious about how federal and state privacy laws concerning health care should be invoked or can be circumvented.

  • Agenda
  • Faculty
TOP