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Opinion Letter No. 95-16
July 18, 1995
UIPA Exceptions to Disclosure Do Not Create Privileges
The OIP opined that the UIPA’s exceptions to
disclosure do not afford a basis to object to discovery
requests under the Hawaii Rules of Civil Procedure ("HRCP").
Because the UIPA and HRCP are
separate bodies of law that apply to different situations, exceptions
to disclosure and discovery are not
interchangeable.
Thus, an agency that receives a clerk-issued subpoena
for medical records is not required to file written objections to
production unless the records are protected by (1) privileges the
HRCP recognizes; (2) specific confidentiality statutes; or (3) statutes
which specifically recognize discovery privileges for government
records. But because disclosure of a person’s medical records
might violate his/her constitutional privacy right absent his/her
consent or court-ordered disclosure, an agency receiving a clerk-issued
subpoena should make reasonable attempts to notify the person affected
which allows them to seek the appropriate judicial relief or protection
under the HRCP.
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