HIPAA Certification for Mental Health Professionals
HIPAA certification for mental health professionals is a practical way to prove you understand how to protect Protected Health Information (PHI) and apply HIPAA requirements in real clinical, administrative, and telehealth scenarios. In mental and behavioral health settings, privacy is not just a legal obligation, it is the foundation of trust, therapeutic alliance, and patient safety. This article explains what HIPAA certification means in practice, why it matters specifically for mental health work, what a strong certification curriculum should include, and how to choose the best HIPAA certification for your role or organization. It also recommends online training because on-demand learning makes it easier to complete required education, document completion, and refresh knowledge throughout the year. Why HIPAA Compliance is Important in Mental Health Care Mental health professionals routinely handle some of the most sensitive categories of health information. Session notes, diagnoses, medications, trauma histories, substance use details, and family dynamics can cause serious harm...
NIST Publishes Guidance on Implementing Zero Trust Architectures
The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has published new guidance on implementing zero trust architecture (ZTA) to help organizations overcome some of the challenges of adopting this new cybersecurity approach. The traditional approach to security involves securing a perimeter, akin to a castle and moat. Perimeter defenses such as firewalls prevent malicious actors from gaining access to internal resources, and antivirus software, intrusion detection systems (IDS), and other security measures provide additional protection should the network perimeter be breached. Generally speaking, with this approach, anything inside the network perimeter is trusted. Zero trust assumes that a malicious actor has already breached the defenses; therefore, no user or device is trusted and must always be verified through authentication processes, even when a user or device has been previously verified. The principle of least privilege is applied to ensure that, in the event of a security breach, damage is limited, with continuous monitoring of all activities and behaviors. Further,...
HHS-OIG Audit Uncovers Fraud Control Failures Within HHS Grant Payment System
The Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General (HHS-OIG) has recently published the findings of an audit of the HHS’s Program Support Center (PSC) grant payment system. The audit sought to establish whether effective internal controls, policies, and procedures had been implemented for preventing fraudulent transactions, and was conducted in response to $7.8 million in grant funds being fraudulently transferred to criminals’ bank accounts between March 2023 and January 2024. The fraudulent activity related to ten grants awarded to seven HHS recipients. According to HHS-OIG, malicious actors used fake email addresses for grant recipients to compromise the PSC grant payment system. The bad actors deleted legitimate users, changed contact information, and requested that payments be sent to their own bank accounts. The bad actors were able to divert more than $10 million in grant funds to their own accounts, although the banks rejected some of those transfers, resulting in a net loss to the HHS of $7.8 million. The HHS-OIG audit looked specifically at the PSC’s...
Erie Insurance Experiencing Business Disruption Due to Cyberattack
Pennsylvania-based Erie Indemnity Corp., which does business as Erie Insurance, is investigating a network intrusion. Erie Insurance is a Fortune 500 company that provides a range of insurance policies, including life insurance, auto insurance, cyber insurance, and Medicare supplements. According to a recent Form 8-K filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), unusual network activity was identified on June 7, 2025. Its incident response protocols were immediately implemented to safeguard its systems and sensitive data, and law enforcement was notified. Erie Insurance is assisting with the police investigation and has engaged a leading third-party cybersecurity firm to determine the full scope, nature, and impact of the incident, and has confirmed it is continuing to take protective measures. Since the investigation has only recently been launched, it is too early to tell to what extent, if any, policyholders’ information has been exposed or stolen. Erie Insurance has approximately 7 million policyholders in the United States. The company has confirmed that the...
FTC Imposes $1.9 Million Penalty on Evoke Wellness for Deceptive Marketing Campaign
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has proposed a $1.9 million settlement to resolve claims that Evoke Wellness, a Florida-based substance use disorder treatment clinic, engaged in deceptive business practices and deliberately misled consumers who were seeking substance use disorder treatment by pretending to be other clinics. According to the January 2025 complaint, Evoke Wellness, LLC, Evoke Health Care Management, and their officers, Jonathan Mosley and James Hull, conducted a deceptive Google Ads campaign targeting consumers conducting online searches for substance use disorder treatment clinics. According to the FTC, the campaign used the specific names of other clinics as keywords to ensure Evoke’s ads appeared when searches were made for those clinics. The ads prominently displayed the names of the impersonated clinics, misleading consumers into calling the telephone number for Evoke’s telemarketing call center. When the number was called, the Evoke telemarketers would explain that they had reached a centralized admissions office or an addiction treatment hotline,...



