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Re: Raped on Campus? Don¹t Trust Your College to Do the Right Thing - Commentary - The Chronicle of Higher E ducation


Chronological Thread 
  • From: Brett Sokolow <>
  • To: Katie Gentile <>, Saundra Schuster <>, "Di O'Neill, DSW" <>
  • Cc: "" <>
  • Subject: Re: Raped on Campus? Don¹t Trust Your College to Do the Right Thing - Commentary - The Chronicle of Higher E ducation
  • Date: Tue, 3 Mar 2015 03:25:18 +0000
  • Accept-language: en-US

My understanding is that the administrators created the breach, not the counselors.  A therapist blew the whistle.  Ironic that the campus filed a counterclaim against the victim (since dropped), alleging that the false allegations in her lawsuit were going to undermine the faith of other victims in UO.  I’m pretty sure UO’s actions in this case went farther down the road than anything in the victim’s lawsuit.  


Regards,
Brett A. Sokolow

Brett A. Sokolow, Esq.

Attorney-at-Law

President & CEO, The NCHERM Group LLC

Executive Director, The National Behavioral Intervention Team Association 

Executive Director, The Association of Title IX Administrators 

Publisher, Student Affairs eNews 


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From: Katie Gentile <>
Date: Monday, March 2, 2015 at 7:20 PM
To: "" <>, "Di O'Neill, DSW" <>
Cc: "" <>
Subject: RE: Raped on Campus? Don’t Trust Your College to Do the Right Thing - Commentary - The Chronicle of Higher Education

This makes my stomach turn.

In addition, the clinician's specific license is attached to ethical guidelines that are supposed to supercede those of an employer (except potentially for psychologists who changed their/our ethics in 2002 for the military). Even when asked to give up records, a licensed clinician cannot. Any decent employer knows this. Even if subpoenaed by a court of law, clinicians still can only give up summaries in lieu of the exact notes at times.

UO should now be sued for breach of confidentiality.

Katie Gentile, Ph.D.
Associate Professor, Counseling
Director, Gender Studies Program
John Jay College of Criminal Justice
524 W. 59th Street, Rm. L68.15
New York City, NY 10019
Tel. 212.237.8110
Fax. 212.484.1319
Co-Editor, Studies in Gender & Sexuality:
http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/HSGS




From: Saundra Schuster []
Sent: Monday, March 02, 2015 9:53 PM
To: Di O'Neill, DSW
Cc:
Subject: Re: Raped on Campus? Don’t Trust Your College to Do the Right Thing - Commentary - The Chronicle of Higher Education

Here is the applicable analysis:

HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996) is a federal law passed by Congress intended to establish transaction security, privacy and other standards to address concerns about the electronic exchange of health information.  However, the HIPAA Privacy Rule excludes from its coverage those records that are protected by FERPA at institutions that provide health or medical services to students.  This is because Congress specifically addressed how education records should be protected under FERPA.  For this reason, records that are protected by FERPA are not subject to the HIPAA’s Privacy Rule 

HIPAA will be the applicable governing privacy law if the counseling center transmits electronic data about patients, such as health insurance or billing information, AND if the department treats community members as well as students.  If both of these prongs are met then HIPAA will provide the legal framework for addressing personal health information.  If only one, or neither of these applies then FERPA will be the governing privacy law because FERPA applies to all student records.

            If FERPA, not HIPAA, is the governing law, it is important to note that FERPA specifically exempts health and counseling treatment records under the definition of education records protected by the Act 

34 C.F.R. 99.3
Education Records
 (a) The term means those records that are:
(1)  Directly related to a students; and
(2)  Maintained by an educational agency or institution or by a party acting for the agency or institution
(b) The term does not include:          

       (4) Records on a student who is 18 years of age or older, or who is attending an institution of postsecondary education that are:

         (i) Made or maintained by a physician, psychiatrist, psychologist, or other recognized professional or paraprofessional acting in his or her professional capacity or assisting in a paraprofessional capacity;

         (ii) Made, maintained or used only in connection with treatment of the student

         (iii) Disclosed only to individuals providing the treatment.  For the purpose of this definition “treatment” does not include remedial educational activities or activities that are part of the program of instruction at the agency or institution*

*  See advisory letter on the FPCO website regarding this issue

http://www.ed.gov/policy/gen/guid/fpco/ferpa/library/copeuna.html

     Therefore, FERPA is the governing privacy law for student education records in general, but for treatment records created and maintained by a physician, psychiatrist or psychologist or recognized professional, the state statutes on privilege of health and mental health records and professional ethical requirements imposed by licensure will govern the manner in which they are released. Thus, the general standard for sharing private information under FERPA, that is, with a “school official” that “has a legitimate educational need to know”, is not applicable for sharing psychological or medical treatment records internally.  The applicable law for release or sharing of these records would be the applicable state law for counseling based privilege.

Saundra K. Schuster, Esq.
Attorney-at-Law
Partner, The NCHERM Group, LLC

Columbus, Ohio OfficeThe NCHERM Group Office
1952 Samada Avenue116 E. King St., 2nd Fl.
Worthington, OH 43085 Malvern, PA 19355
Direct Line: 614-530-5570Office:  610-579-3725
Fax:  206-666-6598                      www.NCHERM.org  
                                       

On Mar 2, 2015, at 9:05 PM, Di O'Neill, DSW <> wrote:


Subject: Raped on Campus? Don’t Trust Your College to Do the Right Thing - Commentary - The Chronicle of Higher Education

Hello SAPC members,
Can anyone shed light on the assertions made in the article below concerning client records, sexual assault, and if / when Universities ever have access to student counseling center records?
Thank you in advance for your expertise and support!


http://chronicle.com/article/Raped-on-Campus-Don-t-Trust/228093/?cid=pm&utm_source=pm&utm_medium=en


Di O'neill, DSW, LCSW
Counseling and Psychological Services
University of Pennsylvania
3624 Market Street
First Floor, West
Philadelphia, Pa
215-898-7021




http://chronicle.com/article/Raped-on-Campus-Don-t-Trust/228093/?cid=pm&utm_source=pm&utm_medium=en


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