HIPAA Compliance for Medical Centers
HIPAA compliance for medical centers consists of complying with the Administrative Simplification standards of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA). For some medical offices, this can prove more challenging than for others. Some medical centers are well-equipped environments with highly motivated management teams, while others struggle with limited resources to provide the care their communities need. Unfortunately, HIPAA doesn’t distinguish between those who are resource-rich and those who are resource-poor and requires equal HIPAA compliance for medical centers of all shapes and sizes. While this may seem unfair, it is understandable. Individually identifiable health information has to be protected from impermissible uses and disclosures to reduce the likelihood of Protected Health Information being acquired by third parties and used to commit identity theft and insurance fraud. While these events can impact both resource-rich and resource-poor medical centers, resource-poor medical centers will likely feel each impact more if it affects payment...
What is the Civil Penalty for Knowingly Violating HIPAA?
The civil penalty for knowingly violating HIPAA falls within the range of $14,602 and $2,190,294 per violation, depending on whether or not the reason for the violation is corrected within 30 days (i.e., Tier 3 violation or Tier 4 violation). The civil penalty for knowingly violating HIPAA can also be influenced by an organization’s prior compliance history and its cooperation during a HIPAA compliance investigation. If you search for the term “knowingly” in the text of HIPAA, you will find multiple references relating to defrauding health plans and embezzling money from healthcare benefit programs (i.e. Medicare), but only one relating to the wrongful disclosure of individually identifiable health information – and this section relates to criminal penalties for knowingly violating HIPAA rather than civil penalties. However, just before this section, the Act gives the Secretary of Health & Human Services (HHS) the authority to impose financial penalties for the failure to comply with the requirements and standards of the Administrative Simplification provisions unless the...
CareOregon and Health Share of Oregon Warn of Potential Insurance Fraud After Data Breach
CareOregon and Health Share of Oregon have notified certain patients about a data breach and potential insurance fraud. Andover Eye Associates has identified a breach of its email environment. CareOregon and Health Share of Oregon CareOregon and Health Share of Oregon have notified certain patients about unauthorized access to some of their protected health information. It is unclear from the phrasing of the notice whether this was an insider breach or if data was accessed by an external actor. The data breach notice states that, “On October 27, 2025, we learned that one or more people looked at your information without permission.” Social Security numbers and financial information were not accessed. The data viewed and potentially obtained was limited to first and last names, dates of birth, health plan information, Medicaid/Medicare numbers, and primary care provider office. The notice states that there may have been data misuse, warning that the information may have been used to create fake insurance claims. CareOregon and Health Share of Oregon said they were unable to...
What are the HIPAA Breach Notification Requirements?
The HIPAA breach notification requirements are that HHS’ Office for Civil Rights and individuals whose unsecured Protected Health Information (PHI) has been exposed must be notified within a specified timeframe. Different timeframes exist for notifying a breach to HHS’ Office of Civil Rights depending on the number of records breached, and it is important that covered entities develop a breach response plan to ensure breaches of unsecured PHI are made in a timely manner. While most HIPAA covered entities should understand the HIPAA breach notification requirements, organizations that have yet to experience a data breach may not have a good working knowledge of the requirements of the HIPAA Breach Notification Rule. Business associates that have only just started providing a service to covered entities may similarly be unsure of the reporting requirements and actions that must be taken following a breach. The issuing of notifications following a breach of unencrypted PHI is an important element of HIPAA compliance. The failure to comply with HIPAA breach notification requirements...
What is Texas HB300?
Texas HB300 is a bill passed by the Texas legislature in 2011 that updates Chapter 181 of the Texas Health and Safety Code relating the privacy of medical records which overlays HIPAA where more stringent protections exist. The bill has significant implications for many organizations based in Texas – and those outside the State – that assemble, collect, analyze, use, evaluate, store, or transmit the Protected Health Information of Texas residents. In June 2001, Governor Rick Perry signed the Texas Medical Privacy Act into law. The Act created Chapter 181 of the Texas Health and Safety Code and brought the State’s medical records privacy provisions broadly into line with those of the proposed HIPAA Privacy Rule. However, there were some notable differences between the Texas Medical Privacy Act and the HIPAA Privacy Rule: The definition of Covered Entities in the Texas Medical Privacy Act goes beyond the definition of Covered Entities in HIPAA. The Texas Medical Privacy Act has fewer permissible uses and disclosures of Protected Health Information (PHI) than HIPAA....



