What is PHI (Protected Health Information)?

PHI is private information about your health that doctors and hospitals use to help you feel better.

Imagine you have a backpack full of toys, each toy represents a piece of information about you, like your name, age, or what’s wrong with you. PHI is like the most special toys in that backpack, the ones no one else should see unless they’re helping you get better.

When PHI is used

Doctors and nurses use PHI to know how to help you. For example, if you break your arm, they need to know your name so they can give you medicine and write down what happened. That’s like taking out the toy that shows your name and the one that says "broken arm" from your backpack.

When PHI stays private

Sometimes, PHI needs to stay in the backpack, just like you don’t want everyone to know what toys you have. Hospitals make sure only the people who need to know about your health can see those special toys.

That’s how PHI works: it helps doctors help you, but it stays safe and private unless needed.

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Examples

  1. A doctor shares a patient's name and diagnosis with another hospital without asking for permission.
  2. Your medical record is used by multiple doctors in the same clinic to treat you.
  3. A pharmacy gives your prescription details to someone else.

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Categories: Science · PHI· healthcare· privacy