You maintain confidentiality mostly because you want to protect the children in your care. Secondly, it is simply no one else's business who is in your care, what the parents do or pay. When parents can trust you, they will stay with you longer.
Yes, police records are generally considered public information, but there are exceptions for certain sensitive or confidential information.
Confidential refers to information that is extremely private and personal. Some examples of confidential information includes health records, financial information, or extremely sensitive information within a company.
No. Her income tax records belong to her and it is confidential information.
yes medical records are confidential due to the sake of the patient's privacy
Examples of personal information that should be kept confidential and secure include social security numbers, financial account information, medical records, and passwords.
Yes, billing information is protected health information covered under HIPAA regulations.
Because unemployment records are confidential, and available to only the claimant and the employer claimed against, you have to contact your state's unemployment office for the information.
Because unemployment records are confidential, and available to only the claimant and the employer claimed against, you have to contact your state's unemployment office for the information.
Medical records belong to the patient, not the doctor and remain confidential regardless of the doctor's financial condition.
No, these are permanent and confidential records
(in the US) There is no such thing as a "confidential" marriage license. Records, of marriiage, birth and death are so-called "public records" to which anyone has access.
Information that should be treated as confidential includes personal identifying details (e.g., social security numbers, addresses), financial information (e.g., banking details, credit card numbers), medical records, proprietary company information, and sensitive business strategies or plans. This information is typically protected to prevent unauthorized access, use, or disclosure.