Minnesota Administrative Rules
Agency 144 - Health Department
Chapter 4664 - HOSPICE SERVICES
Part 4664.0190 - HEALTH INFORMATION MANAGEMENT
Current through Register Vol. 49, No. 13, September 23, 2024
Subpart 1. Health information management.
A hospice provider must maintain health information management services, including clinical records, according to accepted professional standards and practices, federal regulations, and state statutes pertaining to content of the clinical record, health care data, computerization, confidentiality, retention, and retrieval. The clinical record must be readily accessible and systematically organized to facilitate retrieval. The hospice provider must maintain the records at the hospice provider's office site. For purposes of this part, "health information management" means the collection, analysis, and dissemination of data to support decisions related to patient care, effectiveness of care, reimbursement and payment, planning, research, and policy analysis.
Subp. 2. Form of entries.
A hospice provider must ensure that entries in the clinical record are made for all hospice services provided. Documentation of hospice services must be created and signed by the staff person providing the service no later than the end of the work period. Entries must be legible, permanently recorded in ink, dated, and authenticated with the name and title of the person making the entry.
Subp. 3. Content.
A hospice provider must ensure that each hospice patient's record contains:
Subp. 4. Protection of information.
A hospice provider must safeguard clinical records against loss, destruction, and unauthorized use.
Subp. 5. Confidentiality.
A hospice provider must not disclose to any other person any personal, financial, medical, or other information about a hospice patient, except as may be required or permitted by law. A hospice provider must establish and implement written procedures for security of hospice patient records, including:
Subp. 6. Retention.
A hospice provider must retain a hospice patient's record for at least six years following the patient's discharge or discontinuation of services. A hospice provider must make arrangements for secure storage and retrieval of hospice patient records if the licensee ceases business.
Subp. 7. Transfer.
If a hospice patient transfers to another hospice provider or other health care practitioner or provider or is admitted to an inpatient health care facility, a hospice provider, upon request of the hospice patient or as otherwise authorized by law, must send a copy or summary of the hospice patient's record to the new provider or facility or to the patient.
Subp. 8. Fines.
For each violation of the following subparts, the stated fine shall be assessed:
Statutory Authority: MS s 144A.752