Do your Staff need Training on HIPAA in Emergency Situations?
Emergencies in healthcare are not limited to extreme weather, wildfires, or other natural disasters. Today’s most disruptive incidents are just as likely to be cyberattacks, EHR downtime, system outages, and infrastructure failures. On a more localized level, organizations also face disruptive, aggressive, or violent patients and visitors that create immediate safety risks and require rapid, compliant decision‑making. Across all these scenarios, HIPAA continues to apply and staff must know how to act quickly while protecting patient privacy. Effective HIPAA training equips staff to make permitted disclosures for treatment and care coordination during urgent situations without guessing. It helps staff understand when information may be shared with family or friends involved in a patient’s care, how to communicate with public health authorities, and when disaster relief organizations may receive limited information to help locate or notify individuals. It also clarifies that the minimum necessary standard does not limit disclosures for treatment, while guiding staff to limit other...
Why Your HIPAA Business Associate Should Invest in HIPAA Training
If you operate as a HIPAA Covered Entity, your privacy and security posture extends beyond your walls. HIPAA business associates create, receive, maintain, or transmit protected health information when they deliver services such as billing, hosting, transcription, analytics, and support. Every action taken by a business associate’s workforce can affect your patients and your compliance obligations. For this reason, business associate training is not optional hygiene; it is a necessary control that converts contractual promises into reliable day-to-day conduct. Training Requirements in HIPAA Business Associate Agreements A HIPAA Business Associate Agreement sets standards for safeguarding PHI, reporting incidents, limiting uses and disclosures, and extending requirements to subcontractors. HIPAA training for Business Associate employees makes those standards functional. Well-designed instruction shows HIPAA Business Associate personnel how to apply minimum necessary, authenticate requesters, use approved channels for data exchange, and escalate concerns without delay. It replaces...
Mandatory Medical Privacy Regulations in California You Must Comply With
The Confidentiality of Medical Information Act (CMIA) is just one of several state laws and regulations that apply to medical privacy in California and influence how staff handle patient information. Alongside HIPAA and CMIA, healthcare organizations may also have to comply with the Patient Access to Health Records Act (PAHRA), Medi-Cal confidentiality rules, California’s Consumer Privacy Act and California Privacy Rights Act (CCPA/CPRA), state rules governing artificial intelligence in healthcare (including CCPA’s automated decision-making regulations), and SB81 on patient access and protection. Together, these laws help explain why privacy and security policies in California can look different from those in other states. HIPAA as the Federal Baseline Confidentiality of Medical Information Act (CMIA) Patient Access to Health Records Act (PAHRA) Medi-Cal confidentiality rules, California’s Consumer Privacy Act, and California Privacy Rights Act SB81, California’s Patient Access and Protection Law Training Healthcare Employees to Respect All of California’s Privacy Laws HIPAA...
Mandatory Medical Privacy Regulations in Texas You Must Enforce Across Your Organization
In addition to HIPAA and the Texas Medical Records Privacy Act/HB300, several other laws apply to the privacy and security of medical records in Texas. Laws such as the Texas Identity Theft Enforcement and Protection Act, the Texas Data Privacy and Security Act, the Texas Responsible AI Governance Act, SB1188 and the Texas Medical Practice Act create a layered system of protections that often go beyond HIPAA’s minimum requirements. Evolution of Medical Privacy Laws in Texas The Texas Identity Theft Enforcement and Protection Act (TITEPA) The Texas Data Privacy and Security Act (TDPSA) The Texas Responsible AI Governance Act SB1188 The Texas Medical Practice Act Training Employees for Overlapping Texas Medical Privacy Laws Evolution of Medical Privacy Laws in Texas Before HIPAA, medical confidentiality in Texas was governed mainly by the Texas Health and Safety Code, which already limited how health information could be used and disclosed, and gave patients rights to see their records. HIPAA then introduced federal privacy and security rules, but only for a narrower group of...
The HIPAA Journal Launches the Gold Standard in HIPAA Training for Employees
The HIPAA Journal is launching a new HIPAA employee training program designed to be the gold standard in HIPAA education by combining accurate HIPAA content, practical guidance for employees, and behavior-focused learning. The HIPAA Journal’s mission is to promote patient privacy and data security. Every single member of the team is deeply committed to this mission. There was a lengthy thought process behind the design and content of the training that took over a year and ended up involving dozens of HIPAA experts and hundreds of contributors (privacy officers, compliance officers, IT security managers, practice managers) via surveys. What Prompted The HIPAA Journal to Publish Its Own Online HIPAA Training? We report on HIPAA violations and breaches every week, and they are increasing every year. We have noticed that many of the HIPAA violations are preventable staff errors. We wondered why this is happening, considering everyone in the healthcare sector must be aware of HIPAA. That led us to focus on staff training. We found that existing training is factually inaccurate. Put...

