146.66(3)
(3) The department shall seek federal funding to support the operations of dental clinics that receive grants under
sub. (1) and shall request that the federal department of health and human services encourage collaborative arrangements between private dentists and health centers that receive federal funds under
42 USC 254b.
146.66 History
History: 2011 a. 32.
146.68
146.68
Grant for colposcopies and other services. From the appropriation account under
s. 20.435 (1) (dg), the department shall provide $75,000 in each fiscal year to an entity that satisfies the following criteria to provide colposcopic examinations and to provide services to medical assistance recipients or persons who are eligible for medical assistance:
146.68(1)
(1) The entity is located in the western or northern public health region of the state, as determined by the department.
146.68(2)
(2) The entity provides Papanicolaou tests, and at least 50 percent of the persons for whom the entity provides Papanicolaou tests are recipients of medical assistance or are eligible for medical assistance.
146.68 History
History: 2007 a. 20;
2009 a. 28.
146.71
146.71
Determination of death. An individual who has sustained either irreversible cessation of circulatory and respiratory functions or irreversible cessation of all functions of the entire brain, including the brain stem, is dead. A determination of death shall be made in accordance with accepted medical standards.
146.71 History
History: 1981 c. 134.
146.71 Annotation
To determine whether an infant was “born alive" under s. 939.22 (16) for purposes of the homicide laws, courts apply s. 146.71. State v. Cornelius,
152 Wis. 2d 272,
448 N.W.2d 434 (Ct. App. 1989).
146.81(1)
(1) “Health care provider" means any of the following:
146.81(1)(d)
(d) A physician, physician assistant, perfusionist, or respiratory care practitioner licensed or certified under
subch. II of ch. 448.
146.81(1)(hg)
(hg) A social worker, marriage and family therapist, or professional counselor certified or licensed under
ch. 457.
146.81(1)(hm)
(hm) A speech-language pathologist or audiologist licensed under
subch. II of ch. 459 or a speech and language pathologist licensed by the department of public instruction.
146.81(1)(hp)
(hp) A massage therapist or bodywork therapist licensed under
ch. 460.
146.81(1)(j)
(j) A corporation or limited liability company of any providers specified under
pars. (a) to
(hp) that provides health care services.
146.81(1)(k)
(k) A cooperative health care association organized under
s. 185.981 that directly provides services through salaried employees in its own facility.
146.81(2)
(2) “Informed consent" means written consent to the disclosure of information from patient health care records to an individual, agency or organization that includes all of the following:
146.81(2)(a)
(a) The name of the patient whose record is being disclosed.
146.81(2)(c)
(c) The types of health care providers making the disclosure.
146.81(2)(d)
(d) The purpose of the disclosure such as whether the disclosure is for further medical care, for an application for insurance, to obtain payment of an insurance claim, for a disability determination, for a vocational rehabilitation evaluation, for a legal investigation or for other specified purposes.
146.81(2)(e)
(e) The individual, agency or organization to which disclosure may be made.
146.81(2)(f)
(f) The signature of the patient or the person authorized by the patient and, if signed by a person authorized by the patient, the relationship of that person to the patient or the authority of the person.
146.81(2)(h)
(h) The time period during which the consent is effective.
146.81(3)
(3) “Patient" means a person who receives health care services from a health care provider.
146.81(4)
(4) “Patient health care records" means all records related to the health of a patient prepared by or under the supervision of a health care provider; and all records made by an ambulance service provider, as defined in
s. 256.01 (3), an emergency medical technician, as defined in
s. 256.01 (5), or a first responder, as defined in
s. 256.01 (9), in administering emergency care procedures to and handling and transporting sick, disabled, or injured individuals. “Patient health care records" includes billing statements and invoices for treatment or services provided by a health care provider and includes health summary forms prepared under
s. 302.388 (2). “Patient health care records" does not include those records subject to
s. 51.30, reports collected under
s. 69.186, records of tests administered under
s. 252.15 (5g) or
(5j),
343.305,
938.296 (4) or
(5) or
968.38 (4) or
(5), records related to sales of pseudoephedrine products, as defined in
s. 961.01 (20c), that are maintained by pharmacies under
s. 961.235, fetal monitor tracings, as defined under
s. 146.817 (1), or a pupil's physical health records maintained by a school under
s. 118.125.
146.81(5)
(5) “Person authorized by the patient" means the parent, guardian, or legal custodian of a minor patient, as defined in
s. 48.02 (8) and
(11), the person vested with supervision of the child under
s. 938.183 or
938.34 (4d),
(4h),
(4m), or
(4n), the guardian of a patient adjudicated incompetent in this state, the personal representative, spouse, or domestic partner under
ch. 770 of a deceased patient, any person authorized in writing by the patient or a health care agent designated by the patient as a principal under
ch. 155 if the patient has been found to be incapacitated under
s. 155.05 (2), except as limited by the power of attorney for health care instrument. If no spouse or domestic partner survives a deceased patient, “person authorized by the patient" also means an adult member of the deceased patient's immediate family, as defined in
s. 632.895 (1) (d). A court may appoint a temporary guardian for a patient believed incompetent to consent to the release of records under this section as the person authorized by the patient to decide upon the release of records, if no guardian has been appointed for the patient.
146.81 History
History: 1979 c. 221;
1981 c. 39 s.
22;
1983 a. 27;
1983 a. 189 s.
329 (1);
1983 a. 535;
1985 a. 315;
1987 a. 27,
70,
264;
1987 a. 399 ss.
403br,
491r;
1987 a. 403;
1989 a. 31,
168,
199,
200,
229,
316,
359;
1991 a. 39,
160,
269;
1993 a. 27,
32,
105,
112,
183,
385,
443,
496;
1995 a. 27 s.
9145 (1);
1995 a. 77,
98,
352;
1997 a. 27,
67,
75,
156,
175;
1999 a. 9,
32,
151,
180,
188;
2001 a. 38,
70,
74,
80,
89;
2005 a. 262,
387;
2007 a. 108;
2009 a. 28,
165,
209,
355;
2015 a. 195 s.
83;
2015 a. 265.
146.81 Annotation
A letter written by a person not licensed as a health care provider under sub. (1) was not a record under sub. (4) prepared under the supervision of a health care provider under sub. (1) (j) when the person was employed by a corporation that employed health care professionals but the corporation's shareholders were not health care providers. Hart v. Bennet,
2003 WI App 231,
267 Wis. 2d 919,
672 N.W.2d 306,
02-2993.
146.81 Annotation
When a health care provider denied access to records on the ground that the patient was possibly incompetent to consent to the release of the records, it was obligated under sub. (5) to petition for a temporary guardian for the patient. Szymczak v. Terrace at St. Francis,
2006 WI App 3,
289 Wis. 2d 110,
709 N.W.2d 103,
04-2067.
146.81 Annotation
“Person authorized by the patient" in sub. (5) means a person who has been authorized to consent to the release of a patient's health care records in place of the patient. This definition did not include the plaintiff's attorney because it does not include an attorney who only has a HIPAA release from his or her client that allows the attorney to obtain a copy of the client's medical records, but it does not give that attorney the power to consent to the release of the client's confidential health care records. Moya v. Healthport Technologies, LLC,
2016 WI App 5,
366 Wis. 2d 541,
874 N.W.2d 336,
14-2236.
146.81 Annotation
The plaintiff in this case failed to state a claim that the defendant health care provider violated s. 146.83 (4) (b). The plaintiff did not allege that the defendant withheld any record when it alleged that the defendant concealed the results of an internal investigation into why and under what authority its employees had accessed the plaintiff's health care records. Any records the defendant might have kept regarding its internal investigation would not have related to the plaintiff's health or any treatment or services received. Accordingly, such information, even if reduced to a record, would not have constituted a patient health care record, as that term is defined in sub. (4). Wall v. Pahl,
2016 WI App 71, ___ Wis. 2d ___, ___ N.W.2d ___,
15-1230.
146.815
146.815
Contents of certain patient health care records. 146.815(1)(1) Patient health care records maintained for hospital inpatients shall include, if obtainable, the inpatient's occupation and the industry in which the inpatient is employed at the time of admission, plus the inpatient's usual occupation.
146.815(2)(a)(a) If a hospital inpatient's health problems may be related to the inpatient's occupation or past occupations, the inpatient's physician shall ensure that the inpatient's health care record contains available information from the patient or family about these occupations and any potential health hazards related to these occupations.
146.815(2)(b)
(b) If a hospital inpatient's health problems may be related to the occupation or past occupations of the inpatient's parents, the inpatient's physician shall ensure that the inpatient's health care record contains available information from the patient or family about these occupations and any potential health hazards related to these occupations.
146.815(3)
(3) The department shall provide forms that may be used to record information specified under
sub. (2) and shall provide guidelines for determining whether to prepare the occupational history required under
sub. (2). Nothing in this section shall be construed to require a hospital or physician to collect information required in this section from or about a patient who chooses not to divulge such information.
146.815 History
History: 1981 c. 214.
146.816
146.816
Uses and disclosures of protected health information. 146.816(2)
(2) Sections 51.30 (4) (a) and
(e) and
146.82 and rules promulgated under
s. 51.30 (12) do not apply to a use, disclosure, or request for disclosure of protected health information by a covered entity or its business associate that meets all the following criteria:
146.816(2)(b)
(b) The covered entity or its business associate makes the use, disclosure, or request for disclosure in any of the following circumstances:
146.816(3)
(3) A covered entity that is a treatment facility shall comply with the notice of privacy practices obligations under
45 CFR 164.520, including the obligation to include in plain language in the notice of privacy practices a statement of the individual's rights with respect to protected health information and a brief description of how the individual may exercise those rights including the right to request restrictions on uses and disclosures of protected health information about the individual to carry out treatment, payment, or health care operations as provided in
45 CFR 164.522.
146.816(4)
(4) The department shall make a comprehensive and accessible document written in commonly understood language that explains health information privacy rights available to all applicable health care facilities in the state and on the department's Internet site.
146.816 History
History: 2013 a. 238.
146.817
146.817
Preservation of fetal monitor tracings and microfilm copies. 146.817(1)(1) In this section, “fetal monitor tracing" means documentation of the heart tones of a fetus during labor and delivery of the mother of the fetus that are recorded from an electronic fetal monitor machine.
146.817(2)(a)(a) Unless a health care provider has first made and preserved a microfilm copy of a patient's fetal monitor tracing, the health care provider may delete or destroy part or all of the patient's fetal monitor tracing only if 35 days prior to the deletion or destruction the health care provider provides written notice to the patient.
146.817(2)(b)
(b) If a health care provider has made and preserved a microfilm copy of a patient's fetal monitor tracing and if the health care provider has deleted or destroyed part or all of the patient's fetal monitor tracing, the health care provider may delete or destroy part or all of the microfilm copy of the patient's fetal monitor tracing only if 35 days prior to the deletion or destruction the health care provider provides written notice to the patient.
146.817(2)(c)
(c) The notice specified in
pars. (a) and
(b) shall be sent to the patient's last-known address and shall inform the patient of the imminent deletion or destruction of the fetal monitor tracing or of the microfilm copy of the fetal monitor tracing and of the patient's right, within 30 days after receipt of notice, to obtain the fetal monitor tracing or the microfilm copy of the fetal monitor tracing from the health care provider.
146.817(2)(d)
(d) The notice requirements under this subsection do not apply after 5 years after a fetal monitor tracing was first made.
146.817 History
History: 1987 a. 27,
399,
403.