Chris, I take exception to your comments in your second paragraph that the reality is 
that companies don't really care about protecting patient data.  I work in a hospital 
and have met many people from other hospitals through seminars, meetings, etc.  To say 
that we don't care is patently false.  Patient confidentiality is a priority, second 
only to patient care.  Our hospital has zero tolerance for PHI disclosure.  A nurse 
blabs to someone about a patient and boom! she's fired.  I know, I've seen it happen.
The trouble with HIPAA is that they seem to want hospitals and healthcare 
organizations to be almost as secure as the Pentagon.  Our administration hired a big 
name outfit to give their recomendations.  I had to read through 23 documents from 
them.  And some of them, the suggestions, were insane.  One suggested (although it 
said it was optional) searching all purses and bags that patients or visitors to the 
hospital.  I guess they're afraid someone would sneak in a floppy to be used to copy 
patient data.


Paul Chinnery
Network Administrator
Mem Med Ctr


-----Original Message-----
From: Chris Scharff [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, February 25, 2003 7:10 PM
To: Exchange Discussions
Subject: Re: Exchange server level encryption-OT


Not an expert on the science behind this essay
http://tnr.com/docprint.mhtml?i=20030224&s=easterbrook022403, but the idea
of needing to use nuclear power plants to product the levels of hydrogen
needed for 'clean fuel cells' seems to make the "water is the only
byproduct" argument a bit disingenuous. Course as I said, I'm not an expert
on the subject so I'm certainly open to knowing where the levels of hydrogen
needed for such a thing would come from.

Perhaps instead of replacing HIPPA, those companies subject to its
regulations need to rethink how and why patient data would need to leave
their environment and design secure systems (which e-mail aint) to
facilitate that transmittal. Course the reality is companies aren't really
interested in protecting patient data, just in being compliant with the
various regulatory agencies which govern them. So, following the cheapest
route to compliance they encounter the reality that cheap aint easy. 

On 2/25/03 16:06, "Christopher Hummert" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:



Ok I knew I shouldn't have used that example, cause I knew somewhere we 
were going to get into a debate about it. In addition I should have said 
Hydrogen Fuel Cells which is what I was thinking of when I made the 
statement. As far as the pollution: 

Fuel cells efficiently convert hydrogen fuel and oxygen from the air 
into electricity. Hydrogen fuel cell electric vehicles (HFCEVs) emit 
only water vapor from their exhaust pipes. Demonstrations of HFCEVs have 
been successful and this technology is expected to displace internal 
combustion engines in the 21st Century. 

Which I got from pretty much the first thing I could google up here: 
http://www.hydrogencomponents.com/altfuel.html 


_________________________________________________________________
List posting FAQ:       http://www.swinc.com/resource/exch_faq.htm
Archives:               http://www.swynk.com/sitesearch/search.asp
To unsubscribe:         mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Exchange List admin:    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to