What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)?
Wisconsin
I live in Dane County in Wisconsin. In our county when there is a child custody dispute the case gets referred to the Family Court Counseling Service who does a case study. One of the first things they do in this case study is to ask you about all your physical and mental health providers and then ask you to sign releases to all these providers (regardless of whether there are accusations of abuse and/or competency issues) so that the service can collect general information to see if there is something they should be concerned about. My case is long over and my ex-wife and I settled (so the results of the study were never released), but I remembered feeling like I didn't have a choice but to sign these releases and after the fact I felt a sense of violation and I feel untrusting about seeing therapists again for fear that anything I disclose might be used against me if my ex-wife were ever to challenge my equality as a parent again. I have always felt that the Family Court Counseling service should be required to give us a pamphlet of what our rights are not just for our own sake, but so that the service itself is clear what the law is and what its responsibility is to the law.
I've currently been monitoring the situation of the sister of a friend who has been going through a custody case. She is poor, can't afford a lawyer, has a criminal record, and isn't the best communicator in representing herself. In the current case when she went through this study she was asked by the Family Court Counseling Service to sign a release for her medical records, she refused. After the fact, when the study was released it included the following line:
Now there is no doubt about it, this woman didn't do herself any favors by becoming agitated with the FCCS and GAL. But what drew my attention right away is the statement in a report that it is stated in the report that it is a "requirement" to sign away your rights to privacy. My understanding is that if there are concerns about issues of abuse, neglect, or competency, the court can order this information to be released. But to make it a requirement for someone to sign away their rights to privacy would suggest that they don't have those rights in the first place. While we all might be concerned that if we don't fully cooperate with an agency of this sort there might be some form of subtle retaliation (hence the need for pamphlet stating our rights), to have this stated to be a mark against someone in a report seems to me that there is an acknowledged consequence of someone not signing away their rights to privacy, which suggests that these aren't rights at all and which I would think would be a violation of the HIPAA law.
I'd like to see if anyone can help clarify federal law regarding this issue for me. I'm posting it here in the civil rights section as opposed to the family law section because I have found that most family law attorney's aren't as focused on civil rights issues.
Wisconsin
I live in Dane County in Wisconsin. In our county when there is a child custody dispute the case gets referred to the Family Court Counseling Service who does a case study. One of the first things they do in this case study is to ask you about all your physical and mental health providers and then ask you to sign releases to all these providers (regardless of whether there are accusations of abuse and/or competency issues) so that the service can collect general information to see if there is something they should be concerned about. My case is long over and my ex-wife and I settled (so the results of the study were never released), but I remembered feeling like I didn't have a choice but to sign these releases and after the fact I felt a sense of violation and I feel untrusting about seeing therapists again for fear that anything I disclose might be used against me if my ex-wife were ever to challenge my equality as a parent again. I have always felt that the Family Court Counseling service should be required to give us a pamphlet of what our rights are not just for our own sake, but so that the service itself is clear what the law is and what its responsibility is to the law.
I've currently been monitoring the situation of the sister of a friend who has been going through a custody case. She is poor, can't afford a lawyer, has a criminal record, and isn't the best communicator in representing herself. In the current case when she went through this study she was asked by the Family Court Counseling Service to sign a release for her medical records, she refused. After the fact, when the study was released it included the following line:
During the meeting with the FCCS counselor and the Guardian Ad Litem, (*her name) became agitated and defensive. When questioned about her current pregnancy (*her name) escalated yet further and and refused to sign required releases of information for collaterals.
Now there is no doubt about it, this woman didn't do herself any favors by becoming agitated with the FCCS and GAL. But what drew my attention right away is the statement in a report that it is stated in the report that it is a "requirement" to sign away your rights to privacy. My understanding is that if there are concerns about issues of abuse, neglect, or competency, the court can order this information to be released. But to make it a requirement for someone to sign away their rights to privacy would suggest that they don't have those rights in the first place. While we all might be concerned that if we don't fully cooperate with an agency of this sort there might be some form of subtle retaliation (hence the need for pamphlet stating our rights), to have this stated to be a mark against someone in a report seems to me that there is an acknowledged consequence of someone not signing away their rights to privacy, which suggests that these aren't rights at all and which I would think would be a violation of the HIPAA law.
I'd like to see if anyone can help clarify federal law regarding this issue for me. I'm posting it here in the civil rights section as opposed to the family law section because I have found that most family law attorney's aren't as focused on civil rights issues.