Learn more about the HHS Civil Penalty Increase and How the Supreme Court is dealing with
Texas v. Azar :
SUPREME COURT DECLINES TO EXPEDITE ACA CASE
The United States Supreme Court denied motions to expedite consideration of Texas v. Azar, the lawsuit challenging the
constitutionality of the Affordable Care Act’s (ACA) individual mandate.
This decision follows a federal appeals court ruling that the individual mandate is unconstitutional due to the elimination of the individual mandate penalty in 2019. The appeals court remanded the case to the lower court to determine whether the rest of the ACA can remain in place without the individual mandate. However, the U.S. House of Representatives and several states asked the Supreme Court to take up the case before the lower court issued a ruling.
Because the Supreme Court declined to expedite the case, the lower court is now tasked with determining whether the rest of the ACA may be severed from the individual mandate provision.
The lower court’s ruling is expected to ultimately be appealed to the Supreme Court, and a final decision is not expected to be made until that time. It is likely that any ruling eliminating the ACA will be stayed pending appeal.
HHS INCREASES CIVIL PENALTIES FOR HIPAA VIOLATIONS
The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) recently published a final rule increasing the civil monetary penalties for violations of laws enforced by HHS, including the HIPAA privacy and security rules.
HHS is required to adjust these penalties for inflation each year to improve their effectiveness and maintain their deterrent effect. The new penalty amounts are effective for penalties assessed on or after Jan. 17, 2020.
2020 HIPAA Civil Penalties
HHS may assess civil penalties when it discovers a HIPAA violation. The penalty amount depends on the facts involved.
- For violations where the covered entity does not know about the violation (and by exercising reasonable diligence, would not have known about the violation), the penalty amount is between $119 and $59,522 for each violation.
- If the violation is due to reasonable cause, the penalty amount is between $1,191 and $59,522 for each violation.
- For corrected violations that are caused by willful neglect, the penalty amount is between $11,904 and $59,522 for each
violation.
- For violations caused by willful neglect that are not corrected, the penalty amount is $59,522 per violation, with an annual cap of $1,785,651 for all violations of an identical requirement.
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