Is AWS HIPAA Compliant?
AWS supports HIPAA compliance for customers required to comply with the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act and will enter into a Business Associate Agreement with HIPAA covered entities and business associates. However, for AWS to be HIPAA compliant, customers must configure and use AWS services compliantly. AWS can be HIPAA compliant, but it is also easy to make configuration mistakes that will leave protected health information (PHI) unprotected and accessible by unauthorized individuals, violating HIPAA Rules. Amazon Will Sign a Business Associate Agreement for AWS Amazon is keen for healthcare organizations to use AWS and will enter into a Business Associate Agreement for many of its services. Under the Agreement, Amazon will support the security, control, and administrative processes required under HIPAA. Previously, under the terms of the AWS BAA, the AWS HIPAA compliance program required covered entities and business associates to use Amazon EC2 Dedicated Instances or Dedicated Hosts to process Protected Health Information (PHI), although that is now no...
Lawsuit Seeks Clarification on Legality of Missouri AG Request for Medical Records of Transgender Patients
Washington University (WU) is seeking confirmation from the court about whether Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey has the legal authority to obtain the electronic health records of patients of the WU Transgender Center. AG Bailey issued civil investigative demands to WU on February 23, 2023, requesting documents and electronic health records of patients of the Transgender Center be provided as part of an investigation into the practices of the center. The investigation was initiated after a whistleblower, Jamie Reed, provided a signed affidavit to the Attorney General about her employment as a case worker at the WU Transgender Center at St. Louis Children’s Hospital. Reed claimed that the Transgender Center had caused permanent harm to many of its patients through prescribed treatments. She claimed healthcare providers at the Transgender Center lied to the public and patients about treatment or lack of treatment and the effects treatment would have. She alleged staff at the center prescribed puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones after two hour-long visits, without complete,...
Joint Commission Launches Certification Program for Responsible Secondary Use of Health Data
On December 5, 2023, the Joint Commission launched the Responsible Use of Health Data (RUHD) Certification program for U.S. hospitals and critical access hospitals. The voluntary program will provide an objective evaluation of how well hospitals are maintaining privacy best practices for transferring health data to third parties – Known as secondary use of health data. Hospitals often transfer health data for reasons other than clinical care, such as to support the development of artificial intelligence systems and for quality and operations improvement purposes. The HHS’ Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) reports that 85% of hospitals in the United States have the capability to export patient data for reporting and analysis purposes. While the HIPAA Privacy Rule stipulates the methods that should be used when de-identifying protected health information, currently there is no standard approach for using de-identified data nor validating best practices. The certification program includes an evaluation of whether a hospital is committed to...
HIPAA Compliance Solutions
If you conduct an Internet search for HIPAA compliance solutions, you will get thousands of results. Unfortunately most HIPAA compliance solutions being advertised provide a compliance service in only one or two areas of HIPAA. Few provide total solutions. This is an important distinction to make. In order to be compliant with HIPAA, you have to be totally compliant. It may be commendable that you have HIPAA-compliant data storage, or HIPAA compliant channels of communication, but these are not total HIPAA compliance solutions. It only takes one gap in your compliance efforts for a breach of PHI to occur. You could also be fined for failing to be totally HIPAA-compliant if you are audited by the Department of Health & Human Services (HHS). It is not necessarily the case that individual HIPAA compliance solutions are a waste of time and money, but they do not provide the total coverage you will need in order to be HIPAA compliant. What Does Total HIPAA Compliance Consist Of? This will depend on the nature of your business and whether it is classified as a Covered Entity,...
Who Should HIPAA Complaints be Directed to Within the Covered Entity?
HIPAA complaints made to a covered entity should be directed to the organization’s Privacy Officer regardless of whether the complaint has been made by a member of the public who believes their privacy rights have been violated or by a member of the workforce reporting an internal violation. The process for members of the public should be included on the organization’s Notice of Privacy Practices, but the process for reporting potential HIPAA violations internally can differ. Reporting Potential HIPAA Violations Internally During your HIPAA training, you should have been told who should HIPAA complaints be directed to within the HIPAA covered entity, and the procedures to follow for making complaints about potential HIPAA violations. Generally speaking, the HIPAA violation should be reported to the person in your organization who is responsible for HIPAA compliance, which is typically your Privacy Officer or CISO. You may feel more comfortable reporting the incident to your supervisor. All HIPAA violations, even HIPAA violations that seem relatively minor, should be reported. They...



