[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 93 (Thursday, June 11, 2015)]
[House]
[Pages H4166-H4167]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HIPAA CHANGES IN THE HELPING FAMILIES IN MENTAL HEALTH CRISIS ACT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Pennsylvania (Mr. Murphy) for 5 minutes.
Mr. MURPHY of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, as part of my 3-year
investigation into the Nation's mental health system, I have been
meeting with families and caregivers of those with mental illness.
Their number one concern is the HIPAA privacy rule. Since its inception
in 2002, the rule has generated nearly 70,000 complaints.
Families are locked out from helping in treatment by Federal
regulations that don't understand the complexity of treating a serious
mental illness in someone who has other medical problems, like diabetes
or lung disease or skin problems or other illnesses that require
treatment. When you have those with the diminished capacity to follow
through on their own care, should we just let them languish and suffer?
Should we let their mental illness and poor medical care become what
some consider to be a slow-motion suicide?
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If a family member has a head injury or a stroke or Alzheimer's
illness, a doctor would not hesitate to explain the medical concerns to
a family member. A doctor would do this because the doctor recognizes
the brain illness can make the individual unable to clearly understand
the severity of his illness. According to the current HIPAA laws, when
a child is in severe psychosis, the doctor is unable to tell the
parents anything.
We must recognize that severe mental illness like schizophrenia,
bipolar, and severe depression is brain disease--it is not an attitude.
It is not something cured by pulling oneself up by the bootstraps no
more than dementia is cured by a different outlook on life or by a
motivational poster. We cannot continue to make care the most difficult
for those who have the most difficulty in caring for themselves. This
has to change. There is merit to those 70,000 complaints, and we must
address them compassionately.
The Helping Families in Mental Health Crisis Act, H.R. 2646, allows
the doctor or mental health professional to provide the diagnosis,
treatment plans, appointment scheduling, and prescriptions for an
individual with a serious mental illness to a known caregiver. This
change would apply to those who can benefit from care yet who are
unable to follow through on their own self-directed care.
Put yourself in the shoes of a family member. Imagine yourself trying
to help a parent or a sibling or a child, and a caseworker who doesn't
even know your family member can't help you because he is bound from
letting you--a loving and caring parent--help your son or daughter. The
law puts you behind this heartless barrier where you have to passively
watch your child wither away. But what parent would not run into a
burning building or throw himself in front of a car to save his child?
Yet, with our current HIPAA laws, you have to watch and suffer along
with your child.
We have to change this, and H.R. 2646 does make this important
change. My legislation does not allow for the sharing of psychotherapy
notes or of personal conversations between a therapist and a patient.
It is limited to the information that is essential to caring for
someone with a serious mental illness to make sure he stays in care.
Let's make it easier. Let's make it more compassionate for those who
need help the most. I urge my colleagues to please support H.R. 2646
and to sign on as cosponsors.
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