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Georgia NPP Requirements: HIPAA + Georgia State Rules

By NPP Generator Research Team  ·  Published Apr 25, 2026  ·  Last reviewed Apr 28, 2026  ·  6 min read

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Quick answer: Georgia HIPAA covered entities follow HIPAA's NPP rules plus Georgia statutes covering HIV-test results (O.C.G.A. § 31-22-9.1), mental-health records (O.C.G.A. § 37-3-166), and abortion-related records. The NPP should reflect Georgia-specific elevated protections.

Georgia doesn't have a single comprehensive medical-privacy statute; instead, several condition-specific statutes layer on HIPAA. The most common interaction points are HIV-test results, mental-health records, and abortion-related record specifics. For most Georgia practices, the NPP follows HIPAA's standard content with a few state-specific clauses.

Family resources. For broader state-law overlay context, see ComplyCreate's HIPAA vs state privacy laws guide.

Georgia AIDS Confidentiality Act

O.C.G.A. § 31-22-9.1 et seq. establishes confidentiality for HIV-test results. Disclosure generally requires written consent; specific exceptions permit disclosure for treatment, public-health, and certain narrow purposes. NPPs for Georgia practices that perform or store HIV-test results should describe this elevated protection.

Mental-health record protection

O.C.G.A. § 37-3-166 protects mental-health treatment records in Georgia. Disclosure beyond treatment, payment, and operations may require additional patient consent. The NPP should reflect that mental-health records receive elevated state-law protection.

Abortion-related record specifics

Georgia's abortion statutes (O.C.G.A. § 16-12-141) include reporting and recordkeeping obligations. The interaction with HIPAA and the federal HHS reproductive-health rule (June 2024) is complex. NPPs for Georgia practices providing reproductive-health services should describe reporting obligations carefully.

Genetic information

O.C.G.A. § 33-54-3 governs genetic information in insurance contexts; § 31-22-9.5 governs genetic-test results in healthcare. Disclosure generally requires written authorization. NPPs should reference these protections where applicable.

Putting it together

A complete Georgia NPP includes:

How this fits with the HHS February 2026 revised model

The HHS February 2026 final rule revised the NPP model and clarified several content requirements. Practices issuing or updating an NPP after February 16, 2026 should align to the new model. Key changes that affect every NPP regardless of specialty include: the addition of mandatory language describing the practice's safeguards against unauthorized AI-driven uses of PHI; updated breach-notification language reflecting Cures Act information-blocking interactions; refined Right of Access language describing electronic-format options; and updated language around marketing communications.

For practices that updated to the HHS Feb 2026 model upon publication, no further regulatory NPP work is required until the next material change. Practices still on pre-February-2026 templates should update before their next material-change cycle to avoid drift.

Common implementation pitfalls

Across audits and routine compliance reviews, several specific implementation pitfalls recur:

Audit-readiness considerations

When OCR or a state regulator audits, the NPP review typically asks for:

Quick reference checklist

When producing or updating an NPP, work through this checklist:

How NPP Generator helps

Producing a HIPAA-compliant Notice of Privacy Practices from scratch — even with the HHS February 2026 model as a starting point — typically takes a few hours of attention to entity-specific details: practice name, locations, Privacy Officer, vendor relationships, state-specific overlays, sensitive-record categories, communication preferences, and effective-date management.

NPP Generator's tool walks through a guided intake, captures the practice-specific information, and produces a formatted PDF and editable Word document aligned to the HHS February 2026 model in about five minutes. The tool also handles state-specific overlay language for the major state-law regimes and produces a current-effective-date document ready for distribution. For practices that need state-specific overlay (Texas HB300, Illinois MHDDC, California CMIA/CCPA, etc.), the tool's state-handler ensures the right elevated-protection language appears in your final document.

About state-law and federal preemption

HIPAA establishes a federal floor for health-information privacy. State laws are not preempted where they are more protective of patient privacy than HIPAA — that's the basic preemption rule under 45 CFR § 160.203. The interaction can be subtle: a state law may be stricter on a specific topic (HIV records, mental-health records, genetic information) without being globally stricter than HIPAA. The NPP must reflect the stricter rule wherever it applies. Practices serving patients in multiple states often issue a single NPP that incorporates the strictest applicable rules across those states; multi-state organizations sometimes use state-specific NPP versions for clarity. For organizations subject to specific federal regimes beyond HIPAA — 42 CFR Part 2 for SUD, FERPA for educational records, Title X for federally-funded family-planning services — the NPP should describe how those regimes interact with HIPAA's framework.

Further reading

For more on the topics covered here:

More state-specific NPP guides

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Related: State-specific NPP guides

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Georgia require a separate HIV consent?
Yes. O.C.G.A. § 31-22-9.1 requires written consent meeting specific content for HIV-test result disclosure. Most practices use a combined HIPAA + GA AIDS Confidentiality Act authorization.
How does Georgia's abortion law affect the NPP?
The NPP should describe Georgia's reporting obligations and how reproductive-health records are handled. The federal HHS reproductive-health rule (June 2024) restricts certain interstate disclosures of reproductive-health PHI; the NPP should be specific about which protections apply.
Is there a Georgia state-level privacy enforcement office?
Georgia Department of Public Health and the Attorney General handle most state-level health privacy enforcement. Federal HIPAA enforcement remains with HHS-OCR; Georgia-specific statutes may have different complaint routes.
Does Georgia have a comprehensive privacy statute like California?
No. Georgia has not enacted a comprehensive privacy statute. Health privacy is governed by HIPAA + condition-specific Georgia statutes. Practices should monitor legislative developments; comprehensive privacy bills are periodically proposed.
Cross-state telehealth from Georgia — what rules apply?
Generally, the patient's state of residence controls which stricter law applies in addition to HIPAA. A Georgia provider serving an out-of-state patient should consult that state's rules.