Estate Planning

Incapacity Planning: Remember a HIPAA Release

incapacity planning, HIPAAUnderstanding the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) is crucial when planning your estate. This is especially true from an incapacity planning perspective. HIPAA significantly impacts how your health information is handled in times of incapacity. This blog explores HIPAA’s role in incapacity planning and highlights the critical issue of healthcare privacy for adult children.

HIPAA: A Brief Overview

HIPAA, enacted in 1996, primarily aims to protect patients’ privacy by restricting access to their health information. It applies to healthcare providers, insurance companies, and healthcare clearinghouses.

Under HIPAA, without specific authorization, your health information cannot be shared, even with close family members.

HIPAA’s Impact on Estate Planning

When planning for incapacity, it’s important to consider who will make healthcare decisions on your behalf if you’re unable to do so. Here’s where HIPAA plays a vital role:

  1. Designating a Healthcare Proxy: A healthcare proxy is someone you appoint to make healthcare decisions if you become incapacitated. However, for them to receive the necessary information, HIPAA requires explicit permission.
  2. Creating a HIPAA Release Form: Including a HIPAA release in your estate plan allows designated individuals to access your medical information. Without this, doctors and hospitals can refuse to share your health information. This can include your appointed healthcare proxy or family members.
  3. Incorporating HIPAA in Advance Directives: Advance healthcare directives, like living wills, should be paired with a HIPAA release. This ensures that the individuals making decisions on your behalf have access to all relevant medical information.
  4. Ensuring Coordination: Your estate plan should coordinate the HIPAA release with other legal documents like powers of attorney and living wills to ensure seamless decision-making during incapacity.

HIPAA and Adult Children

A crucial aspect often overlooked is how HIPAA affects parents’ access to their adult children’s (age 18 and older) health information. Once a child turns 18, parents are no longer automatically authorized to receive their health information due to HIPAA regulations. This can be particularly concerning in emergencies or when young adults are away at college.

Protecting Your Adult Child’s Health Information Rights

  1. HIPAA Release for Adult Children: Encourage your adult children to fill out a HIPAA release form naming you or another trusted adult as authorized to receive their health information. This is crucial for parents to be involved in their adult children’s healthcare decisions if they become incapacitated.
  2. Healthcare Power of Attorney: Alongside a HIPAA release, a healthcare power of attorney allows parents to make medical decisions for their incapacitated adult children. This is particularly important for students studying away from home.
  3. Emergency Preparedness: Ensure that copies of these documents are readily accessible in case of an emergency. It’s wise for parents and adult children to have digital copies stored securely for quick access.

Key Considerations for Estate Planning with HIPAA

  1. Clear Communication: Discuss with family members and designated healthcare proxies about your health preferences and ensure they understand their roles.
  2. Professional Advice: Consult with an estate planning attorney to ensure your documents comply with state laws and HIPAA regulations.
  3. Regular Updates: Review and update your HIPAA forms and healthcare directives regularly, especially after major health changes.

Conclusion: Integrating HIPAA Into Your Estate Plan

Incorporating HIPAA considerations into your estate plan is essential. Doing so ensures that your healthcare preferences are respected and that your designated agents have the information they need to make informed decisions.

It also protects your adult children by enabling you to assist them during health crises. By understanding and adhering to HIPAA regulations, you can create a comprehensive estate plan that safeguards your healthcare privacy and empowers your loved ones to act in your best interests.

Remember, while planning for the future can be complex, integrating HIPAA into your estate planning is a vital step in safeguarding your health information privacy and ensuring your wishes are honored. With the right preparations and documents in place, you can have peace of mind knowing that your healthcare decisions are in trusted hands, even during times of incapacity.

Take Action Today!

We can help you put a plan in place that addresses every detail, so you can go forward with total peace of mind. To get started, send us a message or call our Oklahoma City estate planning office at 405-843-6100.

If you are closer to Tulsa, our location there can be reached at 918-615-2700.

 

Larry Parman, Attorney at LawLarry Parman, Attorney at Law

After helping his own family deal with a lengthy probate and the IRS following his father’s untimely death in a farm accident, Larry Parman made a decision to help families create effective estate plans designed to reduce taxes, minimize legal interference with the transfer of assets to one’s heirs, and protect his clients’ assets from predators and creditors.

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