Or. Admin. Code § 413-040-0450 - Confidentiality
(1) Many Department
records are exempt from disclosure and are strictly confidential under the
public records exemptions or confidentiality status. All medical records are
privileged information. AIDS and/or HIV test results are specifically
designated highly confidential by statute (ORS
433.045) and Department Health
Administrative Rule (333-012-0270(1)-(9)) and must be held in the most strictly
observed confidence possible to avoid consequences of casual or inappropriate
disclosure of information. Information regarding a client's HIV status is to be
maintained in a locked file separate from the case.
(2) In order to provide services to the child
and to administer Department's child welfare services, Department staff may
inform only those directly involved in case planning and who have a need to
know, that a child or an adult who has a significant role in the child's plan,
has AIDS or is HIV positive. The identification of who has a need to know in
order to adequately meet the needs of the child shall be determined through a
staffing which includes the worker, supervisor and Department central office
(Personal Care Coordinator) representative, and should include input from the
physician, county Health Department who ordered the test, or the HIV Program of
the Department's Health Policy cluster.
(3) For children receiving services under a
Voluntary Custody Agreement (CF 1005) or a Voluntary Placement Agreement (CF
499), the responsible parent(s) shall always be involved in making medical
decisions for the child, and have access to medical information.
(4) Each person who subsequently gains access
to this information must keep it in strictest confidence (ORS
433.045(3)).
The worker shall advise all persons who have access to the medical information
of their duty to safeguard the confidential nature of the
information.
(5) If the Department
learns from any source that a child is HIV positive, the above procedures must
be followed.
(6) Pursuant to Health
cluster Rule 333-012-0270, if the Department possesses information that an
adult client or other person associated with a case if HIV positive, this does
not confer the right to disclose the information, except as permitted by Oregon
law.
(7) If disclosure of HIV
information is deemed necessary for planning in the context of a court hearing,
the worker shall not disclose the status in open court without either the
written consent of the infected persons or a court order.
Notes
Stat. Auth.: ORS 418.005
Stats. Implemented: ORS 418.005
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