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

PJ Murray

PJ Murray is the founder and publisher of The HIPAA Journal. He is dedicated to The HIPAA Journal’s mission of promoting a culture of HIPAA compliance and patient privacy by helping organizations and their staff understand both the regulations and the importance of protecting patient privacy and data security. Prior to working on The HIPAA Journal, PJ has a technical background in software development and an engineering degree and has a particular interest in the cybersecurity aspects of protecting the privacy of medical records.

Why Covered Entities Should Provide HIPAA Training to All Members of the Workforce
Dec08

Why Covered Entities Should Provide HIPAA Training to All Members of the Workforce

The provision of HIPAA training is not only a regulatory requirement. It is also an investment. Effective HIPAA training reduces the risk of costly violations, strengthens patient trust, improves workplace efficiency, and enhances organizational resilience against cyber threats. But what determines effective HIPAA training? Complying with the Minimum Training Requirements is Not Enough In most cases, complying with the minimum HIPAA training requirements is not enough to see a return on investment. This is because the HIPAA Privacy Rule requires covered entities to implement policies and procedures with respect to Protected Health Information (PHI) and train members of the workforce on the policies and procedures that apply to their functions. This approach to HIPAA training has the potential to leave gaps in knowledge for workforce members with incidental access to PHI. It can also result in policies and procedures being misinterpreted or applied inconsistently if training is provided out of context of HIPAA, or compliance shortcuts being taken “to get the job done” when the...

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Why Healthcare Employees need Cybersecurity Training beyond HIPAA Security Awareness Training Requirements
Dec05

Why Healthcare Employees need Cybersecurity Training beyond HIPAA Security Awareness Training Requirements

The HIPAA Security Rule requires every workforce member to complete security awareness training. That baseline introduces obligations and core concepts, but it does not teach employees how modern attacks unfold in day-to-day work or how to respond in the first minutes of an incident. Additional cybersecurity training closes this gap by turning general awareness into practical, repeatable behaviors that prevent breaches. Healthcare staff work at the point where patient information meets real-world decisions. That is why cybersecurity training must be built around medical records, not around abstract IT concepts. The goal is simple and concrete: keep protected health information confidential, intact, and available while care teams do their jobs. Training should show how everyday tasks in registration, clinical care, billing, and administration can expose records, and it should teach the safe action staff can take in seconds. Cybersecurity Training for Healthcare Employees Because most HIPAA breaches stem from human error, our Cybersecurity Training teaches staff how attackers...

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Recommendations for Staff HIPAA Social Media Training
Dec04

Recommendations for Staff HIPAA Social Media Training

HIPAA social media training should start by explaining how the HIPAA Privacy Rule applies to anything staff share online. Training needs to define Protected Health Information in simple terms and then connect that definition to social media posts. Staff should see that HIPAA covers not only names and medical record numbers, but any image, description, or detail that can reasonably identify a person or associate someone with a diagnosis, condition, or treatment. A single photo of a patient or their injuries, a distinctive tattoo, a recognizable setting, or a description of a rare accident in a small community can all reveal who the patient is. Training should state clearly that posting individually identifiable health information or any associated identifying features on personal social media accounts, professional networking sites, or personal blogs is an impermissible disclosure of PHI unless there is a valid HIPAA authorization in place. Staff Authorisation for Social Media HIPAA social media training should then describe what a valid HIPAA authorization for social media actually...

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HIPAA Security Awareness Training must Focus on Protecting Medical Records
Dec03

HIPAA Security Awareness Training must Focus on Protecting Medical Records

HIPAA cybersecurity awareness training is a required, organization-wide program that teaches every workforce member what protected health information is, how it moves through daily clinical and administrative workflows, and how to keep it confidential, intact, and available while delivering care. Under HIPAA 45 CFR §164.308(a)(5), HIPAA Covered Entities and HIPAA Business Associates must “implement a security awareness and training program for all members of its workforce (including management).” The regulation specifies a “program” and “all”. HIPAA cybersecurity awareness training must include everyone who creates, receives, maintains, or transmits electronic protected health information. The training should also include anyone with access to the same IT systems as used for PHI because they present a risk as well. HIPAA security awareness training must be tailored for healthcare staff and centered on real threats to medical records, including phishing, unsafe messaging, device loss, and social engineering. Changing Employee Cybersecurity Behaviour An effective program translates...

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Why AI Tools are Problem for HIPAA Compliance and How Training can Help
Nov28

Why AI Tools are Problem for HIPAA Compliance and How Training can Help

AI tools create new privacy and security risks because they can receive, transform, and produce information about patients in ways that are easy to misuse; targeted training gives employees the skills to use approved tools correctly and avoid HIPAA violations. How AI Shows Up in Daily Work AI is used for documentation, transcription, scheduling, triage, imaging support, risk scoring, and patient education. Some tools are fully automated. Others assist human decision making. Staff interact with these systems across clinical and administrative workflows. Many tools need real data to function. That often includes protected health information, even when staff assume data has been stripped of identifiers. Where AI Clashes With HIPAA Unapproved platforms can trigger impermissible disclosures the moment someone enters patient details. Without the right agreements and safeguards, data can be used or shared in ways that violate HIPAA. Even with approved tools, employees must honor the Minimum Necessary Standard. Drafts, summaries, or letters produced by AI can contain more PHI than needed...

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