Privacy and HIPAA

5 ways to drive patient privacy law compliance from within your organization

While it makes sense to protect patients’ health-specific data, social security numbers and home addresses from external threats, the most significant threats to patient privacy laws are on the inside.

Isaac Kohen December 31, 2019

Addressing unclaimed property challenges

Healthcare providers increasingly are being audited for unclaimed property.

Kendall Houghton June 11, 2019

How to avoid the devastating consequences of HIPAA noncompliance

The potential costs of being found noncompliant with HIPAA are too great for a healthcare provider organization not to have in place a compliance program designed to help safeguard patients’ protected health information.

Hernan Serrano May 29, 2019

5 steps to becoming HIPAA compliant

Healthcare organizations that qualify as HIPAA covered entities should take five steps when developing a compliance program designed to meet their obligation under HIPAA to safeguard patients’ protected health information.

HFMA May 20, 2019

Ask the Experts: HIPAA compliance

What are the HIPAA implications of accessing existing subscriber information in our records for patients who don’t have their insurance information?

HFMA May 14, 2019

$25 million in penalties demonstrates OCR focus on data security

OCR announced 10 important enforcement actions in 2018.

J. Stuart Showalter, JD, MFS May 14, 2019

The ROI of HIPAA Compliance

Marty Puranik describes the financial benefits of compliance.

Marty Puranik February 5, 2019

HIPAA IT Predictions for 2019

Moazzam Adnan Raja describes new opportunities and challenges in health IT.

Moazzam Adnan Raja January 17, 2019

HIPAA Breaches Make News, Cost Money

Three Boston hospitals that were recently slapped with HIPAA violations for allowing television crews into their facilities are reminders of the intricacies of patient privacy laws. 

J. Stuart Showalter November 20, 2018

HIPAA Compliance Needs Improvement

While technology changes over the past 22 years have allowed increasingly skillful data breaches, we can expect even more dramatic developments in the next five years. Attention to potential breaches now—in all their various forms—will be essential to managing unforeseen future threats.

J. Stuart Showalter July 11, 2018
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