Across
- 3. A patient's ___ ___ ___ is the day they were born. This is one piece of personal information we can use to verify HIPAA.
- 8. If a patient's account ___-___, that is considered one piece of information because the system recognized the phone number or Rx number. Only one additional piece of information needs to be verified.
- 13. HIPAA should be verified ___ releasing any PHI.
- 14. Prescribers or ___ companies may call on behalf of the patient; if they can verify HIPAA, we can disclose PHI to them.
- 16. We don't need to verify HIPAA if we are not ___ PHI.
- 17. If a caller is asking about the stock of a medication, also known as an ___ ___, HIPAA doesn't have to be verified.
Down
- 1. A patient's ___ ___ ___ ___ counts as one piece of information and must be verified on every call.
- 2. A patient ___ is anyone involved in the patient's care.
- 4. In the case of an ___, HIPAA verification is not required other than to verify the correct patient.
- 5. Each prescription has a unique code assigned to it by the pharmacy. This is called an ___ ___ and is one piece of personal information we can use to verify HIPAA.
- 6. PHI is made up of ___ information and health information.
- 7. A patient's ___ ___ is a unique series of digits used to contact them on their mobile cellular device or telephone. This is one piece of personal information we can use to verify HIPAA.
- 9. HIPAA stands for Health Insurance ___ and Accountability Act.
- 10. Not following HIPAA rules is unethical, against Walgreens policy, and against the ___.
- 11. We need to ___ two pieces of HIPAA information before releasing PHI.
- 12. PHI stands for ___ Health Information.
- 15. HIPAA requires that ___ pieces of personal information be verified.
