25% off all training courses Offer ends May 29, 2026
View HIPAA Courses
25% off all training courses
View HIPAA Courses
Offer ends May 29, 2026

The HIPAA Journal is the leading provider of HIPAA training, news, regulatory updates, and independent compliance advice.

Owen Bates

Owen Bates is an Contributing Editor and HIPAA Subject Matter Expert at The HIPAA Journal, having joined the publication in November 2024. He researches HIPAA compliance topics and writes authoritative reference articles that help readers understand complex regulatory requirements in a clear and practical way. He also reviews and updates existing content to reflect changes to HIPAA regulations, helping ensure the accuracy and relevance of published material. In addition to his editorial work, Owen contributes as a reviewer and tester of The HIPAA Journal Training courses, supporting the development of high-quality educational content. He also advises The HIPAA Journal’s clients on best practices for HIPAA implementation and enforcement. Owen is a psychology graduate of Westmont College, California.

A Comprehensive Guide to HIPAA Designated Record Sets
Mar03

A Comprehensive Guide to HIPAA Designated Record Sets

This guide to HIPAA designated record sets is designed to reduce common misunderstandings about how individually identifiable non‑health information may become Protected Health Information (PHI) when it is maintained in a designated record set, and what information patients have the right to access, amend, or request restrictions on under HIPAA. Understanding how HIPAA defines and protects patient information requires more than familiarity with the term “Protected Health Information.” HIPAA treats information contextually, and whether a non-health data element is protected often depends on how it is maintained and used within the organization. This is why the concept of HIPAA designated record sets is so important to HIPAA compliance. The designated record set determines which information falls under HIPAA’s privacy protections and becomes subject to individual rights such as access and amendment. When organizations misunderstand what belongs in a designated record set, they risk misclassifying information, mishandling access requests, and applying HIPAA protections inconsistently....

Read More
Why Healthcare Staff Need HIPAA Training for Social Media
Feb23

Why Healthcare Staff Need HIPAA Training for Social Media

Healthcare staff need HIPAA training for social media because a single post, photo, or comment can expose Protected Health Information (PHI), trigger a reportable breach, damage the organization’s reputation, and create personal legal risk for the employee. Social media feels informal and personal, but the HIPAA Privacy Rule and HIPAA Security Rule still apply every time a staff member talks about patients, work cases, or the workplace online. How social media turns everyday moments into HIPAA risk HIPAA does not only protect obvious identifiers like a name or medical record number. Any detail that can reasonably identify a person or connect them to a health condition, diagnosis, or treatment can qualify as Protected Health Information. A photo of a recognizable tattoo, a description of “the only serious car wreck in town last night,” or a story about a local public figure receiving care can all reveal who the patient is, even if no name appears. Social media amplifies this risk. Once something is posted, the author loses control over where it goes, who screenshots it, or how it is...

Read More
HIPAA Exceptions
Feb09

HIPAA Exceptions

The text of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act is full of HIPAA exceptions – adding to the complexity of complying with the Act and often resulting in organizations and public agencies applying far more stringent restrictions than necessary. In 2007, the Reporters Committee for the Freedom of the Press published a Guide to Medical Privacy Law. The Guide highlighted multiple instances in which hospitals, ambulance services, schools, and public agencies unjustifiably withheld news from reporters for fear of violating HIPAA – even though several of the entities were not subject to HIPAA compliance. According to the Guide, the fear of violating HIPAA led to many entities applying HIPAA overzealously – often applying standards without considering when HIPAA exceptions exist. And there are many HIPAA exceptions. A review of the HIPAA Administrative Simplification provisions finds 50 uses of the word “exception” and a further 100+ uses of the word “except”. It is impractical to list all the HIPAA exceptions in one article, especially as some exist which are not...

Read More
What Is Healthcare-Adjacent Data?
Feb06

What Is Healthcare-Adjacent Data?

Healthcare-adjacent data is any health‑related or health‑influenced information that falls outside HIPAA’s definition of Protected Health Information because it is not created, received, maintained, or transmitted by a covered entity or business associate, or because it is not processed for a HIPAA‑regulated activity. As digital health tools, wearables, and AI‑driven services become more common, a growing amount of information sits near the edges of traditional healthcare. This information often looks like health data and can influence health decisions, yet it does not always qualify as Protected Health Information (PHI) under HIPAA. Understanding the distinction between PHI and healthcare‑adjacent data has become essential for healthcare organizations, business associates, and third‑party service providers. They now operate in a regulatory environment shaped by overlapping federal and state privacy laws and by a digital ecosystem where data flows freely across clinical, consumer, and commercial systems. How HIPAA Defines PHI — and What Falls Outside the Definition HIPAA protects a...

Read More
Does your Staff Understand the Role of HIPAA Officers?
Jan22

Does your Staff Understand the Role of HIPAA Officers?

Most healthcare staff know that HIPAA exists, yet many may not really understand what HIPAA officers do or how those officers support their daily work. When staff see HIPAA Privacy and Security Officers only as rule enforcers or distant administrators, they miss a key resource that can help them make better decisions, prevent incidents, and resolve problems before they become reportable breaches. Why it Matters that Staff Understand HIPAA Officer Roles HIPAA is a moving target. Rules, implementation specifications, technology, and internal processes change over time. No front-line employee can track every update or interpret every nuance alone. The HIPAA Privacy Officer and HIPAA Security Officer exist to take on that responsibility at an organizational level and to translate it into clear, practical guidance for the workforce. If staff do not understand what these officers do, they are less likely to ask questions when they feel unsure, less likely to report potential incidents quickly, and more likely to handle concerns informally or ignore warning signs. That puts patients, the...

Read More
x

Is Your Organization HIPAA Compliant?

Find Out With Our Free HIPAA Compliance Checklist

Get Free Checklist