Coming from 10 years in medical billing, i'll pass this on.....HIPAA is to protect your privacy. You're free to share whatever information you want, however you want, with whomever you want. It's in place to keep anyone that's providing you with care, from telling anyone else about it.....that's the Accountability part (first A). While that "A" gets the most attention, it's only part of the legislation. HIPAA-HITECH has even more regulation to ensure that the data is protected.
As someone else said, it doesn't make it advisable. Advertising that information is not smart. Why? Because it could be used by someone else to commit insurance fraud. If anyone besides the person covered by the plan makes use of the plan for any reason, it's fraud. What you would be doing, is putting private information out in a public way. What you would need to examine is if your agreement with your provider has any clause about releasing that information. You could potentially violate the agreement and they could potentially nullify your coverage. And you might find it difficult to then get new coverage because of that (or would be charged a higher premium for it because they would say they need to cover their liability for fraud potential on your account based on your previous behavior). While someone else might be the one committing the fraud, you could be held liable for posting it publically and making it freely available for others to use. In a court setting it could be said that you were an accomplice to the fraud...which has GRAVE penalties!
So best practice, keep it in your wallet.
Bookmarks