Section 20. No medical service corporation may, without the express and informed written consent of its subscriber or a covered family member of its subscriber, disclose any information it may have acquired from or about any such subscriber or covered family member pertaining to the administration of benefits provided for expenses arising from the out-patient diagnosis or treatment, or both, of mental or nervous conditions; provided, however, that:

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Terms Used In Massachusetts General Laws ch. 176B sec. 20

  • Corporation: A legal entity owned by the holders of shares of stock that have been issued, and that can own, receive, and transfer property, and carry on business in its own name.
  • Fraud: Intentional deception resulting in injury to another.
  • Jurisdiction: (1) The legal authority of a court to hear and decide a case. Concurrent jurisdiction exists when two courts have simultaneous responsibility for the same case. (2) The geographic area over which the court has authority to decide cases.

(a) no such written consent from such subscriber or covered family member shall be made a condition of the receipt of such benefits or any other benefits for which the insured subscribes;

(b) nothing contained herein shall prohibit the disclosure of any information held by such medical service corporation which is not privileged pursuant to section one hundred and thirty-five of chapter one hundred and twelve or section twenty B of chapter two hundred and thirty-three;

(c) a medical service corporation shall not be prohibited from disclosing aggregate patient data if such data contains no information personally identifying any insured or family member of the insured;

(d) a medical service corporation shall not be prohibited from disclosing patient utilization data to a law enforcement authority, a state board of registration, or a court of competent jurisdiction if the medical service corporation, a law enforcement authority, or a state board of registration has reason to believe (i) a patient is committing or has committed fraud, or (ii) a provider is committing or has committed fraud or professional misconduct related to the provision of such diagnosis or treatment;

(e) nothing contained herein shall prohibit a medical service corporation from using or disclosing patient information for coordination of benefits, subrogation, peer review or utilization review. For the purposes of this clause the term ”coordination of benefits” shall mean the determination of primary and secondary responsibility for the payment of a claim between or among two or more insurers providing the same or similar coverage to an insured. Nothing contained herein shall prohibit a medical service corporation from disclosing patient or provider identifiers to a self-insured plan administered by said medical service corporation; provided, however, that such identifiers shall be used only for purposes of billing and audit; or

(f) that nothing contained herein shall prohibit a medical service corporation from disclosing patient information to an account which is self-insured in whole or in part, and administered by such corporation for research to be conducted by the account; provided, however, that no patient shall be the subject of such research without having first been notified by the account in writing of the scope and purpose of the research. Such written notice shall clearly state that the patient will not be a participant in any such research and will not be penalized in any way if the patient elects in writing to be excluded. Any research conducted by an account under this clause shall maintain the confidentiality of all identifiable patient information.