Privacy Policy
How We Keep Your Information Secure
The following Privacy Policy describes the way in which we protect your private health information and other confidential information, and describes your rights regarding this information.
WEBSITE PRIVACY POLICY (updated 10/12/2023)
By using our website, you hereby consent to our privacy policy and agree to it’s terms and conditions.
1. Log Files
https://www.ReactivateTherapy.com follows a standard procedure of using log files. These files log visitors when they visit websites. All hosting companies do this as part of hosting services’ analytics. The information collected by log files include internet protocol (IP) addresses, browser type, internet service provider (ISP), date and time stamp, referring/exit pages, and possibly the number of clicks. These are not linked to any information that is personally identifiable. The purpose of the information is for analyzing trends, administering the site, tracking user’s movement on the website, and gathering demographic info.
2. Third Party Privacy Policies
Third-party ad servers or ad networks use technologies like Cookies, JavaScript, or Web Beacons that are used in their respective advertisements and links that appear on https://www.ReactivateTherapy.com, which are sent directly to user’s browser. They automatically receive your IP address when this occurs. These technologies are used to measure the effectiveness of their advertising campaigns and/or to personalize the advertising content that you see on websites that you visit. Note that Reactivate Therapy has no access to or control over these cookies that are used by third-party advertisers.
Reactivate Therapy’s privacy policy does not apply to other advertisers or websites. Thus, we are advising you to consult the respective privacy policies of these third-party ad servers for more detailed information. It may include their practices and instructions about how to opt-out of certain options. You can choose to disable cookies through your individual browser options. To know more detailed information about cookie management with specific web browsers, it can be found at the browser’s respective websites.
3. Children’s Information
Another part of our priority is adding protection for children while using the internet. We encourage parents and guardians to observe, participate in, and/or monitor and guide their online activity. Reactivate Therapy does not knowingly collect any personal identifiable information from children under the age of 13. If you think that your child provided this kind of information on our website, we strongly encourage you to contact us immediately and we will do our best to promptly remove such information from our records.
4. Application and Relevance
This privacy policy applies only to our online activities and is valid for visitors to our website with regards to the information that is shared and/or collected at https://ReactivateTherapy.com. This policy is not applicable to any information collected offline or via channels other than this website.
CLINIC PRIVACY POLICY: Physical Location (updated 12/29/2022)
1. Summary of Rights and Obligations Concerning Health Information
Our clinic is committed to preserving the privacy and confidentiality of your health information, which is required both by federal and state law, as well as by ethics of the medical profession. We are required by law to provide you with this notice of our legal duties, your rights, and our privacy practices, with respect to using and disclosing your health information that is created or retained by our clinic.
Each time you visit us, we make a record of your visit. Typically, this record contains your symptoms, examination and test results, diagnoses, treatment, and a plan for future care or treatment. We have an ethical and legal obligation to protect the privacy of your health information and we will only use or disclose this information in limited circumstances. Records are kept strictly according to HIPAA guidelines. Physical records are kept behind a minimal of two lock and key barriers. Digital records are kept encrypted in protected databases. This information is only accessible to staff and relevant affiliated business associates (for example, to bill your insurance).
In general, we may use and disclose your health information to:
- plan your care and treatment;
- provide treatment by us or others;
- communicate with other providers such as referring physicians;
- receive payment from you, your health plan, or your health insurer;
- make quality assessments and work to improve the care we render and the outcomes we achieve, known as health care operations;
- make you aware of services and treatments that may be of interest to you; and
- comply with state and federal laws that require us to disclose your health information.
We may also use or disclose your health information where you have authorized us to do so.
You have certain rights to your health information. You have the right to:
- ensure the accuracy of your health record;
- request confidential communications between you and your physician and request limits on the use and disclosure of your health information; and
- request an accounting of certain uses and disclosures of health information we have made about you.
We are required to:
- maintain the privacy of your health information;
- provide you with notice, such as this Notice of Privacy Practices, as to our legal duties and privacy practices with respect to information we collect and maintain about you;
- abide by the terms of our most current Notice of Privacy Practices;
- notify you if we are unable to agree to a requested restriction; and
- accommodate reasonable requests you may have to communicate health information by alternative means or at alternative locations.
We reserve the right to change our practices and make new provisions that effectively protect the health information that we maintain.
Should our information practices change, a revised Notice of Privacy Practices will be available upon request. If there is a material change, a revised Notice of Privacy Practices will be distributed to the extent required by law.
We will not use or disclose your health information without your authorization, except as descried in our most current Notice of Privacy Practices.
In the following pages we explain our privacy practices and your rights to your health information in more detail.
If you have limited proficiency in English, you may request a Notice of Privacy Practice in Spanish.
2. We May Use or Disclose Your Medical Information In The following Ways
A. Treatment:
We may use and disclose your medical information to provide you with medical treatment or services. For example, we may use your health information to write a prescription or to prescribe a course of treatment. We will record your current healthcare information in a record so, in the future, we can see your medical history to help in diagnosing and treatment, or to determine how well you are responding to treatment. We may provide your health information to other health providers, such as referring or specialist physicians, to assist in your treatment. Should you ever be hospitalized,, we may provide the hospital or its staff with the health information it requires to provide you with effective treatment.
B. Payment:
We may use and disclose your health information so that we may bill and collect payment for the services that we provided to you. For example, we may contact your health insurer to verify your eligibility for benefits, and may need to disclose to it some details of your medical condition or expected course of treatment. We may use or disclose your information so that a bill may be sent to you, your health insurer, or a family member. The information on or accompanying the bill may include information that identifies you and your diagnosis, as well as services rendered, any procedures performed, and supplies used. Also, we may provide health information to another health care provider, such as an ambulance company that transported you to our office, to assist in their billing and collection efforts.
C. Health Care Operations:
We may use and disclose your health information to assist in the operation of our practice. For example, members of our staff may use information in your health record to assess the care and outcomes in your case and others like it as part of a continuous effort to improve the quality and effectiveness of the healthcare and services we provide. We may use and disclose your health information to conduct cost-management and business planning activities for our practice. We may also provide such information to other health care entities for their health care operations. For example, we may provide information to your health insurer for its quality review purposes.
D. Medical Residents and Medical Students:
Medical residents or medical students may observe or participate in your treatment or use your health information to assist in their training. You have the right to refuse to be examined, observed, or treated by medical residents or medical students.
E. Business Associates:
Tulsa Chiropractic Rehab sometimes contracts with third-party business associates for services. Examples include answering services, transcriptionists, billing services, consultants, IT specialists, and legal counsel. We may disclose your health information to our business associates so that they can perform the job we have asked them to do. To protect your health information, however, we require our business associates to appropriately safeguard your information, access only relevant information, and sign a business associate agreement confirming confidentiality.
F. Appointment Reminders:
We may use and disclose information in your medical record to contact you as a reminder that you have an appointment at (name of provider). We usually will call you at home the day before your appointment and leave a message for you on your answering machine or with an individual who responds to our telephone call. However, you may request that we provide such reminders only in a certain way or only at a certain place. We will endeavor to accommodate all reasonable requests.
G. Treatment Options:
We may use and disclose your health information in order to inform you of alternative treatments.
H. Release to Family/Friends:
Our health professionals, using their professional judgment, may disclose to a family member, other relative, close personal friend or any other person you identify, your health information to the extent it is relevant to that person’s involvement in your care or payment related to your care. We will provide you with an opportunity to object to such a disclosure whenever we practicably can do so. We may disclose the health information of minor children to their parents or guardians unless such disclosure is otherwise prohibited by law.
I. Health-Related Benefits and Services:
We may use and disclose health information to tell you about health-related benefits or services that may be of interest to you. In face-to-face communications, such as appointments with your physician, we may tell you about other products and services that may be of interest to you.
J. Newsletters and Other Communications:
You have the option of receiving information via newsletters or other communications. We may use your non-medical information such as name or email address in order to communicate to you via newsletters, mailing, or other means regarding treatment options, health related information, disease management programs, wellness programs, or other community based initiatives or activities in which our practice is participating. We do not share this information with outside companies. In no circumstance will we sell your information to any outside party or business.
K. Disaster Relief:
We may disclose your health information in disaster relief situations where disaster relief organizations seek your health information to coordinate your care, or notify family and friends of your location and condition. We will provide you with an opportunity to agree or object to such a disclosure whenever we practicably can do so.
L. Marketing:
In most circumstances, we are required by law to receive your written authorization before we use or disclose your health information for marketing purposes. However, we may provide you with promotional gifts of nominal value. Under no circumstances will we sell our patient lists or your health information to a third party without your written authorization.
M. Fundraising:
The following sentence is required only if the practice intends to engage in fundraising. We may contact you as part of a fundraising effort relating to the practice.
N. Public Health Activities:
We may disclose medical information about you for public health activities. These activities generally include the following:
- licensing and certification carried out by public health authorities;
- prevention or control of disease, injury, or disability;
- reports of births and deaths;
- reports of child abuse or neglect;
- notifications to people who may have been exposed to a disease or may be at risk for contracting or spreading a disease or condition;
- organ or tissue donations; and
- notifications to appropriate government authorities if we believe a patient has been the victim of abuse, neglect, or domestic violence. We will make this disclosure when required by law, or if you agree to the disclosure, or when authorized by law and in our professional judgment disclosure is required to prevent serious harm.
O. Funeral Directors:
We may disclose health information to funeral directors so that they may carry out their duties.
P. Food and Drug Administration (FDA):
We may disclose to the FDA and other regulatory agencies of the federal and state government health information relating to adverse events with respect to food, supplements, products and product defects, or post-marketing monitoring information to enable product recalls, repairs, or replacement.
Q. Psychotherapy Notes:
Under most circumstances, without your written authorization we may not disclose the notes a mental health professional took during a counseling session. However, we may disclose such notes for treatment and payment purposes, for state and federal oversight of the mental health professional, for the purposes of medical examiners and coroners, to avert a serious threat to health or safety, or as otherwise authorized by law.
R. Research:
We may disclose your health information to researchers when the information does not directly identify you as the source of the information or when a waiver has been issued by an institutional review board or a privacy board that has reviewed the research proposal and protocols for compliance with standards to ensure the privacy of your health information.
S. Workers Compensation:
We may disclose your health information to the extent authorized by and to the extent necessary to comply with laws relating to workers compensation or other similar programs established by law.
T. Law Enforcement:
We may release your health information:
- in response to a court order, subpoena, warrant, summons, or similar process if authorized under state or federal law;
- to identify or locate a suspect, fugitive, material witness, or similar person;
- about the victim of a crime if, under certain limited circumstances, we are unable to obtain the person’s agreement;
- about a death we believe may be the result of criminal conduct:
- about criminal conduct as (name of provider);
- to coroners or medical examiners;
- in emergency circumstances to repost a crime, the location of the crime or victims, or the identity, description, or location of the person who committed the crime;
- to authorized federal officials for intelligence, counterintelligence, and other
- national security authorized by law; and
- to authorized federal officials as they may conduct special investigations or provide protection to the President, other authorized person, or foreign heads of state.
U. De-identified Information:
We may use your health information to create “de-identified” information or we may disclose your information to a business associate so that the business associate can create de-identified information on our behalf. When we “de-identify” health information, we remove information that identifies you as the source of the information. Health information is considered “de-identified” only if there is no reasonable basis to believe that the health information could be used to identify you.
V. Personal Representative:
If you have personal representative, such as a legal guardian, we will treat that person as if that person is you with respect to disclosures of your health information. If you become deceased, we may disclose health information to an executor or administrator of your estate to the extent that person is acting as your personal representative.
W. HLTV-III Test:
If we perform the HLTV-III test o you (to determine if you have been exposed to HIV), we will not disclose the results of the test to anyone but you without your written consent unless otherwise required by law. We also will not disclose the fact that you have taken the test to anyone without your written consent unless otherwise required by law.
X. Limited Data Set:
We may use and disclose a limited data set that does not contain specific readily identifiable information about you for research public health, and health care operations. We may not disseminate the limited data set unless we enter into a data use agreement with the recipient in which the recipient agrees to limit the use of that data set to the purposed for which it was provided, ensure the security of the data, and not identify the information or use it to contact nay individual.
3. Authorization for Other Uses of Medical Information
Uses of medical information not covered by our most current Notice of Privacy Practices or the laws that apply to us will be made only with your written authorization.
If you provide us with authorization to use or disclose medical information about you, you may revoke that authorization, in writing, at any time. If you revoke your authorization, we will no longer use or disclose medical information about you for the reasons covered by your written authorization, except to the extent that we have already taken action in reliance on your authorization or, if the authorization was obtained as a condition of obtaining insurance coverage and the insurer has the right to contest a claim or the insurance coverage itself. We are unable to take back any disclosures we have already made with your authorization, and we are required to retain our records of the care that we provided to you.
4. Your Health Information Rights
You have the following rights regarding medical information we gather about you:
A. Right to Obtain a Paper Copy of This Notice.
You have the right to a paper copy of this Notice of Privacy Practices at any time. Even if you have agreed to receive this notice electronically, you are still entitled to a paper copy.
B. Right to Inspect and Copy.
You have the right to inspect and copy medical information that may be used to make decisions about your care.
Usually, this includes medical and billing records, but does not include psychotherapy notes.
To inspect and copy medical information , you must submit a written request to our privacy officer. We will supply you with a form for such a request. If you request a copy of your medical information, we may charge a reasonable fee for the costs of labor, postage, and supplies associated with your request. We may not charge you a fee if you require your medical information for a claim for benefits under the social Security Act (such as claims for Social Security, supplemental Security Income, and MassHealth benefits) or any other state or federal needs-based benefit program.
We may deny your request to inspect and copy in certain limited circumstances. If you are denied access to medical information, you may request that the denial be reviewed. A licensed healthcare professional who was not directly involved in the denial of your request will conduct the review. We will comply with the outcome of the review.
If your medical information is maintained in an electronic health record, you also have the right to request that an electronic copy of your record be sent to you or to another individual or entity. We may charge you a reasonable cost based fee limited to the labor costs associated with transmitting the electronic health record.
C. Right to Amend.
If you feel that medical information we have about you is incorrect or incomplete, you may ask us to amend the information. You have the right to request an amendment for as long as we retain the information.
To request an amendment, your request must be made in writing and submitted to our privacy officer. In addition, you must provide a reason that supports your request.
We may deny your request for an amendment if it is not in writing or does not include a reason to support the request. In addition, we may deny your request if you ask us to amend information that:
- was not created by us, unless the person or entity that created the information is no longer available to make the amendment;
- is not part of the medical information kept by or for (name of provider);
- is not part of the information which you would be permitted to inspect and copy; -or-
- is accurate and complete
If we deny your request for amendment, you may submit a statement of disagreement.
We may reasonably limit the length of this statement. Your letter of disagreement will be included in your medical record, but we may also include a rebuttal statement.
D. Right to an Accounting of Disclosures.
You have the right to request an accounting of disclosure of your health information made by us. In your accounting, we are not required to list certain disclosures, including:
- disclosures made for treatment, payment, and health care operations purposes or disclosures made incidental to treatment, payment, and health care operations, however, if the disclosures were made through an electronic health record, you have the right to request an accounting for such disclosures that were made during the previous 3 years;
- disclosures made pursuant to your authorization;
- disclosures made to create a limited data set;
- disclosures made directly to you.
To request an accounting of disclosures, you must submit your request in writing to our privacy officer. Your request must state a time period which may not be longer that six years and may not include dates before April 14, 2003. Your request should indicate in what form you would like the accounting of disclosure 9 for example, on paper or electronically by e-mail). The first accounting of disclosures you request within any 12 month period will be free. For additional requests within the same period, we may charge you for the reasonable costs of providing the accounting of disclosures. We will notify you of the costs involved and you may choose to withdraw or modify your request at the time, before any costs are incurred. Under limited circumstances mandated by federal and state law, we may temporarily deny your request for an accounting of disclosures.
E. Right to Request Restrictions.
You have the right to request a restriction or limitation on the medical information we use or disclose about you for treatment, payment, or health care operations. If you paid out-of-pocket for a specific item or service, you have the right to request that medical information with respect to that item or service not be disclosed to a health plan for purposes of payment or health care operations, and we are required to honor that request.
You also have the right to request a limit on the medical information we communicate about you to someone who is involved in your care or the payment for your care.
Except as noted above, we are not required to agree to your request. If we do agree, we will comply with your request unless the restricted information is needed to provide you with emergency treatment.
To request restrictions, you must make your request in writing to our privacy officer. In your request, you must tell us:
- what information you want to limit;
- whether you want to limit our use, disclosure, or both; and
- to whom you want the limits to apply.
F. Right to Request Confidential Communications.
You have the right to request that we communicate with you about medical matters in a certain way or at a certain location. For example, you can ask that we only contact you at work or by e-mail.
To request confidential communications, you must make your request in writing to our privacy officer. We will not ask you the reason for your request. We will accommodate all reasonable requests. Your request must specify how or where you wish to be contacted.
G. Right to Receive Notice of a Breach.
We are required to notify you by first class mail or by e-mail (if you have indicated a preference to receive information by e-mail), of any breaches of Unsecured Protected Health Information as soon as possible, but in any event, no later than 60 days following the discovery of the breach. “Unsecured Protected Health Information” is information that is not secured through the use of a technology or methodology identified by the Secretary of the U. S. Department of Health and Human Services to render the Protected Health Information unusable, unreadable, and undecipherable to unauthorized users. The notice is required to include the following information:
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a brief description of the breach, including the date of the breach and the date of its discovery, if known;
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a description of the type of Unsecured Protected health Information involved in the breach;
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steps you should take to protect yourself from potential harm resulting from the breach;
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a brief description of actions we are taking to investigate the breach, mitigate losses, and protect against further breaches;
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contact information, including a toll-free telephone number, e-mail address,
Web site or postal address to permit you to ask questions or obtain additional information.
In the event the breach involves 10 or more patients whose contact information is out of date we will post a notice of the breach on the home page of our Web site or in a major print or broadcast media. If the breach involves more that 500 patients in the state or jurisdiction, we will send notices to prominent media outlets. If the breach involves more than 500 patients, we are required to immediately notify the Secretary. We also are required to submit an annual report to the Secretary of a breach that involved less than 500 patients during the year and will maintain a written log of breaches involving less that 500 patients.
5. Complaints
If you believe your privacy rights have been violated, you may file a complaint with us or with the Secretary of the U. S. Department of Health and Human Service, 200 Independence Ave., S.W., Washington, D.C. 20201. To file a complaint with us, contact our privacy officer at the address listed above. All complaints must be submitted in writing and should be submitted within 180 days of when you knew or should have known that the alleged violation occurred. See the Office for civil Rights website, www.hhs.gov/oct/hipaa/ for more information. You will not be penalized for filing a complaint.
If you have any questions about this notice, please contact our privacy officer:
Dr. David Fields
Tulsa, OK 74137
918-600-2969