HR-2062 : Still Just a Bill

Overdose Prevention and Patient Safety Act

This bill more closely aligns the federal privacy standards for substance use disorder (SUD) patient records with the standards under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA). Specifically, the bill authorizes the disclosure of SUD patient records without a patient's written consent to: (1) a covered entity for the purposes of treatment, payment, and health care operations, as long as the disclosure is made in accordance with HIPAA; and (2) a public health authority, as long as the content of the disclosure meets HIPAA standards regarding de-identified information. Current law authorizes disclosure of SUD patient records without a patient's written consent only to medical personnel in a medical emergency, to specified personnel for research or program evaluations, or pursuant to a court order.

The bill also repeals and replaces criminal penalties for certain violations involving SUD patient records with the HIPAA civil penalty structure. It also applies HIPAA criminal penalties to wrongful disclosures of SUD patient records. In addition, the bill expands the current prohibition against using SUD patient records in criminal proceedings to include any use in specified federal, state, and local criminal and civil actions.

The bill prohibits certain discrimination based on the release of SUD information under this bill.

Action Timeline

Action DateTypeTextSource
2019-04-04CommitteeReferred to the Subcommittee on Health.House committee actions
2019-04-03IntroReferralReferred to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce.House floor actions
2019-04-03IntroReferralIntroduced in HouseLibrary of Congress

Sponsor :

Rep. Blumenauer, Earl [D-OR-3]
See Cosponsors

Policy Area :

Health
See Subjects
  • Administrative law and regulatory procedures
  • Criminal investigation, prosecution, interrogation
  • Department of Health and Human Services
  • Disability and health-based discrimination
  • Drug, alcohol, tobacco use
  • Employment discrimination and employee rights
  • Evidence and witnesses
  • Health information and medical records
  • Housing discrimination
  • Prescription drugs
  • Right of privacy

Related Bills

See Related Bills