Failure to adhere to the new guidelines could cost your company up to $250,000
per infraction!
On April 21, 2005 (just over three weeks from today), a new Health Insurance
Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) security rule goes into effect. The requirements
of this rule, which are basically information security best practices, focus on
the three cornerstones of a solid information security infrastructure: confidentiality,
integrity and availability of information.
The imminent HIPAA regulatory requirements encompass transmission, storage and
discoverability of Protected Health Information (PHI). Given the widespread use
and mission-critical nature of email, enforcement of HIPAA encryption policies and
the growing demand for secure email solutions, email security has never been more
important to the healthcare industry than it is right now.
Although many assume it applies only to health care providers, HIPAA affects
nearly all companies that regularly transmit or store employee health insurance
information. HIPAA was signed into law in 1996 by former President Bill Clinton,
with the intent of protecting employee health and insurance information when workers
changed or lost their jobs. As Internet use became more widespread in the mid-to-late
1990s, HIPAA requirements overlapped with the digital revolution and offered direction
to organizations needing to exchange healthcare information.
HIPAA in the Workplace Collaboration between employers and healthcare
professionals has grown increasingly digital, and email has played an ever-increasing
role in this communication. However, email?s increased importance can lead to severe
consequences without proper security and privacy measures implemented.
In addition to the usual concerns about privacy and security of email correspondence,
even organizations that are not in the healthcare industry must now consider the
regulatory compliance requirements associated with HIPAA. The Administrative Simplification
section of HIPAA, which, among other things, mandates privacy and security of Protected
Health Information (PHI), has sparked concern about how email containing PHI should
be treated in the corporate setting. HIPAA, as it relates to email security, is
an enforcement of otherwise well-known best practices that include:
- Ensuring that email messages containing PHI are kept secure when transmitted
over an unprotected link
- Ensuring that email systems and users are properly authenticated so that
PHI does not get into the wrong hands
- Protecting email servers and message stores where PHI may exist
Organizations regulated by HIPAA must comply and put these practices in place.
However, the need to comply with regulations puts particular pressure on the healthcare
industry to enhance their use of technology and ?catch up? with other industries
of similar size and scope. Privacy and Email Security The privacy protection
provisions in HIPAA pose a major compliance challenge for the healthcare industry.
These provisions are intended to protect patients from disclosure of any of their
individually identifiable health information. Organizations that fail to protect
this information face fines ranging from $10,000 to $25,000 for each instance of
unauthorized disclosure. If the disclosure is found to be intentional, HIPAA provides
for fines ranging from $100,000 to $250,000 and possible jail time for individuals
involved in the violations.
The clock is ticking ? it?s time to get started Bringing an enterprise
into compliance with the rules set by HIPAA can seem like a very daunting task to
even the most experienced executives. Nonetheless, the growing dependence on email
as a mission-critical application requires that your organization implement comprehensive
security and privacy policies ? and soon. A solid combination of security policies
and the technologies to enforce those policies can ensure improved security as well
as HIPAA readiness and ongoing adherence.
Despite the immediacy of the new HIPAA security rule, your organization can still
achieve compliance. Learn more about how IronMail helps organizations comply with
HIPAA by downloading CipherTrust?s free whitepaper, "IronMail Compliance Control:
Contributing to Corporate Regulatory Compliance".