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Psychiatr News September 1, 2006
Volume 41, Number 17, page 9
© 2006 American Psychiatric Association
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Government News

Confidentiality of NPI Information Worries Physicians

Rich Daly

As physicians obtain their new HIPAA identification code, many question whether the information they must provide on the application will remain private.

Beginning October 1, psychiatrists and other physicians participating in Medicare will have the option to identify themselves on claims by using only their National Provider Identifier (NPI).

Until that date, however, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) asks physicians to use their current Uniform Provider Identification Number (UPIN) and their new NPI on the claims they file.

The NPI system was federally mandated by the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA). The NPI, which replaces the UPIN, functions much like a Social Security number—each is assigned for life and never expires.

All HIPAA "covered entities" are required to obtain an identifier. "Covered entities" are defined as providers, health plans, hospitals, insurers, and health care clearinghouses that conduct certain financial and administrative functions electronically, such as claims, coordination of benefits transactions, and enrollment in health-plan networks.

The NPI is the only identifier that most health plans, both public and private, can use after May 23, 2007, to identify physicians. Smaller health entities have until May 23, 2008, to comply.

NPIs are issued through the National Plan and Provider Enumeration System (NPPES), which accepts applications filed online or through the mail.

As of mid-august, NPIs had been issued to about 850,000 of the nearly 2.5 million physicians and other providers that CMS believes needs them, according to a CMS spokesperson.

As the transition to the NPI system progresses, however, concerns remain over the security of the personal information that physicians must submit as part of their NPI application. In a May 26 letter to CMS, the AMA said it wanted to limit access to the CMS database of physician information and prohibit the use of NPIs for any commercial purposes. CMS is now developing a "data-dissemination policy" that will provide guidelines to control access to the NPI database.

"Until CMS publishes the data-dissemination policy, however, little is known about who will have access to the" to the NPI database, wrote Michael Maves, M.D., executive vice president of AMA.

In a CMS-sponsored panel discussion on NPIs in July, a CMS representative said that the data-dissemination policy had undergone many drafts, but no date has been set for its release.

More information on the NPI and applications forms can be accessed at <https://nppes.cms.hhs.gov/NPPES/StaticForward.do?forward=static.npistart>. {blacksquare}





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