Details
Join us for a virtual Privacy Education Day on Wednesday, February 7, 2024.
CHIMA professional members can earn 4 CPE credits with the Canadian College of Health Information Management for attending.
Are you an employer looking for the most cost-effective way to provide your team with this and other online learning? Please get in touch with us to learn more about the CHIMA Annual Team Learning Subscription. This Privacy Educaion Day and other online events are included in the annual pass. Learn more now.
For corporate ticket sales for this specific event (5+ staff from the same organization), please click here
Pricing
$0 – $149 $149 public | $99 CHIMA members | $0 for ATLS subscribers
*Plus applicable taxes
Agenda
Time (ET) | Type |
11:00 am – 12:00 am | Cultures’ Impact on Privacy Practices In a healthcare setting, professionals working in trustee or custodian-run facilities will interact with people from all walks of life with different perspectives and expectations based, at least in part, on their cultural backgrounds and experiences. In the course of providing health services, these differences must be respected, but privacy laws must be adhered. This session will focus on how to achieve both goals. Diane Aldridge Deputy Commissioner Office of the Saskatchewan Information and Privacy Commissioner |
12:30 pm – 1:30 pm | Privacy Management Programs – A Key Tool for Compliance A Privacy Management Program (PMP) defines how your organization will manage its unique privacy risks and meet its compliance obligations under privacy laws and regulations. Some laws are moving PMPs from best practice to a mandatory requirement. PMPs are generally structured into three core components: foundation and governance, privacy program controls, and ongoing assessment and improvement. Michelle Gignac, B.Sc.H, LL.B Privacy Practice Lead Mara Consulting |
2:00 pm – 3:00 pm | Generative AI and Responsible Health Information Governance: A Regulatory Overview The session with treat the implications for Responsible Health Information Governance: Current status of the draft AI and Data Act (AIDA) Quebec’s Law 25 Recent Guidance from Canadian privacy commissioners on Generative AI Recent amendments to Ontario PHIPA Charles Morgan Partner McCarthy Tétrault LLP |
3:30 pm – 4:30 pm | Working as a Privacy Pro(fessional) Privacy is becoming more complex by the minute as we cope with the changes that technological innovation bring to our field. While the complexity grows, our privacy principles remain, as do our organization’s responsibility, legally and ethically, to protect the information they are in custody of throughout the information’s lifecycle. This session will discuss some prevention, intervention, and postvention steps privacy pros can take to safeguard the information in their custody. Christine Scollon Umphrey, BHA, CHIM, CIPP/C, CIPM, FIP Manager, Privacy & Freedom of Information Lakeridge Health |