LuxSci

Healthcare Email Threat Readiness Strategies

Best Secure Email Hosting

Are you up to date on the latest email security threats?

In this post, we share details from our just-released Email Cyber Threat Readiness Report, exploring the most effective ways to strengthen your healthcare organization’s email cyber threat readiness in 2025.

Let’s go!

Conduct Regular Risk Assessments 

To strengthen your company’s email security posture, you must first identify vulnerabilities in your infrastructure that malicious actors could exploit. Frequent risk assessments will highlight the security gaps in your email infrastructure and allow you to implement the appropriate strategies to mitigate threats.

A comprehensive email risk assessment should include:

  • Assessment of email encryption practices.
  • Review of email authentication protocols, i.e., SPF, DKIM, DMARC.
  • Evaluation of access control policies and practices.
  • Assessment of malware detection capabilities.
  • Audit of third-party integrations.
  • Testing of employee email threat awareness through simulated attacks to determine threat readiness and training needs.
  • Review of incident response and business continuity plans, especially, in this case, in regard to email-based threats.

A risk assessment may also involve the use of vulnerability scanning tools, which scan your email infrastructure looking for conditions that match those stored in a database of known security flaws, or Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVEs). Alternatively, healthcare companies often employ the services of ethical, or ‘white hat’, hackers who carry out penetration tests, in which they purposely attempt to breach your email security measures to pinpoint its flaws.

​​Implement Email Authentication Protocols

As touched on above, enabling and correctly configuring the right email authentication protocols is an essential mitigation measure against phishing and BEC attacks, domain spoofing and impersonation, and other increasingly common email threats. Just as importantly, it allows recipient email servers to verify that a message is authentic and originated from your servers, which reduces the risk of your domain being blacklisted and your emails being directed to spam folders instead of the intended recipient’s inbox.

The three main email authentication protocols are:

  • DomainKeys Identified Mail (DKIM): adds a cryptographic signature to outgoing emails, allowing the recipient’s server to verify that the email was not altered in transit. 
  • Sender Policy Framework (SPF): allows domain owners to specify which servers are authorized to send emails on their behalf, mitigating domain spoofing and other forms of impersonation.
  • Domain-based Message Authentication, Reporting & Conformance (DMARC): builds on SPF and DKIM by establishing policies for handling unauthorized emails. It instructs the recipient email server to monitor, quarantine, or reject emails that fail authentication checks. 

Establish Robust Access Control Policies

Implementing comprehensive access control policies reduces the chances of ePHI exposure by restricting its access to individuals authorized to handle it. Additionally, access privileges shouldn’t be equal and should be granted based on the employee’s job requirements, i.e., role-based access control (RBAC).

Zero Trust Architecture (ZTA), in contrast, is a rapidly emerging, and more secure, alternative to RBAC. ZTA’s core principles are “least privilege”, i.e., only granting the minimum necessary access rights, and “never trust, always verify”, i.e., continually asking for the user to confirm their identity as the conditions of their session change, e.g., their location, the resources they request access to, etc. 

Enable User Authentication Measures

Because a user’s login credentials can be compromised, through a phishing attack or session hijacking, for instance, access control, though vital, only protects ePHI to an extent. Subsequently, you must require a user to prove their identity, through a variety of authentication measures – with a common method being multi-factor authentication (MFA).

Recommended by HIPAA, MFA requires users to verify their identity in two or more ways, which could include:

  • Something they know (e.g., one-time password (OTP), security questions)
  • Something they have (e.g., a keycard or security token)
  • Something they are (i.e., biometrics: retinal scans, fingerprints, etc.). 

What’s more, it’s important to note that the need to enable MFA will be emphasized to a greater degree when the proposed changes to the HIPAA Security Rule go into effect in late 2025.

Identify and Manage Supply Chain Risk

While on the subject of access control, one of the most significant security concerns faced by healthcare organizations is that several third-party organizations, such as vendors and supply chain partners, have access to the patient data under their care to various degrees. As a result, cybercriminals don’t have to breach your email security measures to access ePHI – they could get their hands on your patients’ data through your vendors.

Consequently, third-party risk management must be a fundamental part of every healthcare organization‘s email threat mitigation strategy.  This requires you to ensure that each vendor you work with has strong email security measures in place. In light of this, a HIPAA requirement is to have a business associate agreement (BAA) in place with each third party, or business associate, so you both formally establish your responsibilities in securing ePHI. 

Set Up Encryption for Data In Transit and At Rest

Encrypting the patient data contained in email communication is a HIPAA regulation, as it prevents its exposure in the event of its interception by a cybercriminal. You should encrypt ePHI both in transit, i.e., when being included in emails, and at rest, i.e., when stored in a database.

Encryption standards sufficient for HIPAA compliance include:

  • TLS (1.2 +): a commonly-used encryption protocol that secures email in transit; popular due to being ‘invisible’, i.e., simple to use.
  • AES-256: a powerful encryption standard primarily used to safeguard stored data, e.g., emails stored in databases or archives.
  • PGP: uses public and private key pairs to encrypt and digitally sign emails for end-to-end security.
  • S/MIME: encrypts and signs emails using digital certificates issued by trusted authorities.

Develop a Patch Management Strategy

One of the most common means of infiltrating company networks, or attack vectors, is exploiting known security vulnerabilities in applications and hardware. Vendors release updates and patches to fix these vulnerabilities, so it’s crucial to establish a routine for regularly updating and patching email delivery platforms and the systems and infrastructure that underpin them.


Additionally, vendors periodically stop supporting particular versions of their applications or hardware, leaving them more susceptible to security breaches. With this in mind, you must track which elements of your IT ecosystem are nearing their end-of-support (EOS) date and replace them with suitable, HIPAA-compliant alternatives.

Implement Continuous Monitoring Protocols

Continuously monitoring your IT infrastructure is crucial for remaining aware of suspicious activity in your email traffic and potential security breaches. Without continuous monitoring, cybercriminals have a prime opportunity to infiltrate your network between periodic risk assessments. 

Worse, they can remain undetected for longer periods, allowing them to move laterally within your network and access your most critical data and systems. Conversely, continuous monitoring solutions employ anomaly detection to identify suspicious behavior, unusual login locations, etc. 

Develop Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery Plans

The unfortunate combination of organizations being so reliant upon email communication, email threats being so prevalent, and the healthcare sector being a consistent target for cyber attacks makes a data breach a near inevitability rather than a mere possibility. 

Consequently, it’s imperative to develop business continuity and disaster recovery protocols so you can resume normal operations as soon as possible in the event of a cyber attack. An essential part of a disaster recovery plan is making regular data backups, minimizing the impact on the service provided to patients and customers.

Implement Email Threat Awareness Training for Employees

Healthcare organizations must invest in email threat awareness training for their employees, so they can recognize the variety of email-based cyber attacks they’re likely to face and can play a role in their mitigation.

Email threat awareness training should include:

  • The different email-based cyber threats (e.g., phishing), how they work, and how to avoid them, including AI-powered threats.
  • Who to inform of suspicious activity, i.e., incident response procedures.
  • Your disaster recovery protocols.
  • Cyber attack simulations, e.g., a phishing attack or malware download.

While educating your employees will increase their email threat readiness, failing to equip them with the knowledge and skills to recognize email-based attacks could undermine your other mitigation efforts. 

Download LuxSci’s Email Cyber Threat Readiness Report

To gain further insight into the most effective email threat readiness strategies and how to better defend your healthcare organization from the ever-evolving threat landscape, download your copy of LuxSci’s Email Cyber Threat Readiness Report for 2025

You’ll also learn about the top email threats facing healthcare organizations in 2025, as well as how the upcoming changes to the HIPAA Security Rule may further impact your company’s cybersecurity and compliance strategies.

Grab your copy of the report here and reach out to us today if you want to learn more.

Picture of Pete Wermter

Pete Wermter

As a marketing leader with more than 20 years of experience in enterprise software marketing, Pete's career includes a mix of corporate and field marketing roles, stretching from Silicon Valley to the EMEA and APAC regions, with a focus on data protection and optimizing engagement for regulated industries, such as healthcare and financial services. Pete Wermter — LinkedIn

Get in touch

Find The Best Solution For Your Organization

Talk To An Expert & Get A Quote




A member of our staff will reach out to you

Get Your Free E-Book!

LuxSci High Email Deliverability Best Practices Paper

What you’ll learn:

Enter your email to download now!

We respect your privacy. No spam, ever.

Related Posts

HIPAA compliant email

HIPAA Compliant Email Use Cases for Healthcare Retailers

Today’s digital-first consumers expect the same convenience and personalization from their healthcare providers that they get from their favorite retailers and service providers. However, unlike companies in other sectors, there’s far less room for error for healthcare organizations, especially when it comes to privacy and data security. 

Whether a local pharmacy, online provider of glasses, a wellness store, or a nationwide retail health clinic, the key to building long-term loyalty and ensuring trust with your customers lies in trusted, meaningful communication that’s timely, relevant – and, above all, secure.

As a result, HIPAA compliant email is a strategic component for reliable and effective communication with your customers.

But, what about HIPAA?

Far from being a roadblock, HIPAA compliance is actually an enabler for retail healthcare brands that want to deliver more personalized, more targeted messaging without putting customer trust, or their sensitive personal data, at risk.

In this post, we dive into the most impactful email use cases for retail healthcare providers, as well as how deploying a secure email delivery platform like LuxSci can unlock more meaningful engagement, greater loyalty, and accelerated growth for your company.

Why Email Remains a Top Channel for Retail Healthcare

Email Is Everywhere – Because It Works

Email isn’t just for work or spam folders. It’s the preferred communication channel for tens of millions of health-conscious consumers across all demographics. People are accustomed to receiving alerts from their pharmacies, reminders from clinics, and promotions from their preferred wellness brands – all in one convenient place – and email is an important part of the mix.

When deployed securely, email becomes a powerful, personal, and persistent touchpoint for healthcare engagement.

HIPAA Compliance Enables Trust and Transparency

While your customers crave convenience, they also demand privacy – especially when it comes to their health. HIPAA compliant email ensures that personal health data and protected health information (PHI) stays precisely that – protected – while enabling retail healthcare brands to deliver personalized communications that build trust and loyalty.

HIPAA Compliance Helps Ensure Secure Healthcare Marketing

HIPAA doesn’t restrict your ability to communicate; conversely, it defines how you can do it securely and best perform, while protecting the sensitive data under your care. When emails contain PHI, you need to ensure:

  • Email content encryption
  • Access controls
  • Secure storage and transmission
  • A signed Business Associate Agreement (BAA) with your email provider

With the key HIPAA requirements in place, retail healthcare organizations can send high-impact, personalized, and, with some platforms, such as LuxSci, automated emails to engage and educate their customers – all while adhering to HIPAA compliance regulations.

How HIPAA Compliant Email Improves Retail Results

HIPAA compliant email doesn’t just check a box – it opens the door for personalized, proactive, and performance-driven customer and patient engagement. With the right strategy and the right HIPAA compliant email services provider, healthcare retailers can:

  • Deliver marketing messages that include PHI with confidence
  • Develop trust and customer loyalty through secure, reliable, and frequent communication
  • Increase new and repeat purchases and average order value (AOV)
  • Lower operational costs in comparison to phone and physical mail-based engagement campaigns

HIPAA Compliant Email Use Cases for Healthcare Retailers

Now, let’s look at six essential use cases that healthcare retailers can employ for more effective customer and patient engagement.  

Use Case #1: New Product Announcements

Why It Matters: Drive sales and keep customers informed

Whether it’s a new allergy medication, wellness supplements, or a wearable device, product launch email campaigns allow customers and targets to stay in the loop regarding new offerings that could benefit their health. This empowers individuals to take a more active role in their healthcare journey, while helping you meet your organization’s growth objectives.

HIPAA Compliant Email Advantage

  • Announce product launches tailored to individual customer needs, such as health conditions or specific health needs
  • Use PHI-related content deliver highly targeted, highly segmented campaigns – while staying compliant
  • Build trust by ensuring messages are private and secure

Use Case #2: Promotional Offers and Discounts

Why It Matters: Boost loyalty and repeat business

Both retail healthcare providers and customers benefit from promotions, such as 2-4-1 supplement deals, seasonal flu shot discounts, or loyalty reward bonuses. HIPAA compliant email allows you to securely execute promotional campaigns even when they’re linked to health data or prior purchasing behavior.

HIPAA Compliant Email Advantage

  • Target based on previous purchases, prescriptions, or any other PHI data points
  • Comply with privacy laws while increasing engagement
  • Deliver offers directly to inboxes – no portals or logins

Use Case #3: Reminders for Refills, Appointments, and Screenings

Why It Matters: drive adherence to health plans and improve outcomes

Forgetful customers don’t refill prescriptions, miss wellness exams, and ignore follow-up visits. HIPAA-compliant email reminders help tactfully nudge them towards taking favorable action. 

HIPAA Compliant Email Advantage

  • Automate refill and screening reminders based on PHI
  • Avoid manual call-outs or printed letters
  • Boost adherence and improve overall satisfaction

Use Case #4: Order Confirmations and Delivery Notifications

Why It Matters: Create a seamless shopping experience

Consumers want to know that their orders are being processed, shipped, or ready for pickup; in other words, that they’re being taken care of and not taken for granted. For prescriptions, OTC medication, or wellness products, email is the perfect way to keep them updated.

HIPAA Compliant Email Advantage

  • Include product names, refill details, and other customer data securely in emails 
  • Track opens and clicks to ensure delivery – re-target as needed 
  • Reduce support call volumes with proactive, regular email updates

Use Case #5: Educational Health Content & Resources

Why It Matters: Position your brand as a trusted health partner

From seasonal wellness tips to chronic condition education, sending valuable health education and awareness content helps position your brand as a go-to source for relevant, credible advice – and a contributor to keep people healthier.

HIPAA Compliant Email Advantage

  • Personalize content based on past purchases or health concerns
  • Build deeper engagement and trust with relevant, timely topics
  • Share sensitive health content without privacy risk

Use Case #6: Customer Satisfaction and Loyalty Surveys

Why It Matters: Collect feedback to improve products and services

Post-purchase or post-visit surveys enable retail healthcare providers to measure customer satisfaction, while identifying key areas for improvement. This not only gives you an edge over competitors who are less diligent in collecting feedback, but you also make your customer feel heard, further strengthening their brand loyalty. 

HIPAA Compliant Email Advantage

  • Send personalized surveys securely
  • Include PHI-related context without fear of violation
  • Collect better data to inform future campaigns and services

LuxSci Helps Healthcare Marketers Send Secure Email at Scale

Retail healthcare is evolving rapidly – and your customers expect communication that’s personal, secure, and immediate. With HIPAA-compliant email, you can deliver all of that, and more.

From promotions and product launches to order updates and educational content, secure email helps you build stronger relationships, improve customer outcomes, and grow your business, all while maintaining the privacy and trust that healthcare demands.

With retail healthcare leaders like 1-800 Contacts as customers, LuxSci specializes in secure, HIPAA compliant communication solutions for healthcare organizations, including retail health brands, consumer wellness providers, and medical equipment providers. 

Whether you’re a national pharmacy chain, a growing telehealth brand, or a local wellness shop, LuxSci provides you with the secure infrastructure and capabilities to scale personalized email engagement with confidence. This includes:

  • Automated email encryption (TLS, PGP, S/MIME)
  • Email marketing tools specifically designed to align with HIPAA compliance requirements
  • 98%+ deliverability and high performance throughput
  • APIs and SMTP options for seamless data integration and automation
  • Support for marketing, transactional, and operational messages
  • A signed Business Associate Agreement (BAA) – with no loopholes or “out-of-scope” services that compromise your compliance posture 

Is it time to make us switch from your current provider? 

Contact us today to find out more. 

Retail Healthcare Secure Email Use Cases FAQs

Can retail Healthcare brands send promotional emails under HIPAA?

Yes, with proper consent and a fully HIPAA-compliant platform like LuxSci, you can send targeted promotional emails that include PHI.

What kind of PHI can I include in a secure email?

You can include health conditions, medication details, order info, service history, and a large array of other PHI data points in your messaging – provided the email is encrypted and sent through a compliant platform.

Are delivery and refill reminders considered PHI?

Yes, if the email content relates to a specific patient and their health, then it contains PHI. That’s precisely why it’s so vital that secure email is used to send out such reminders, or any communication containing sensitive customer or paitent data.

How do I ensure HIPAA compliance with my marketing emails?

Deploying a platform like LuxSci that signs a BAA, provides email encryption, including its content, and all the required PHI safeguards is the best way to ensure HIPAA compliance when executing your marketing campaigns. Better yet, LuxSci also features automation and hypersegmentation to enhance the efficacy of your customer engagement campaigns, as well as ensuring they align with HIPAA requirements.

Can I send secure email campaigns in bulk or high volumes?

Most definitely! In fact, LuxSci’s high-volume secure email solution is ideal for large-scale outreach, whether it’s marketing, educational, or transactional emails. We have designed our infrastructure to facilitate the consistent delivery of hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of emails in accordance with your company’s engagement needs and HIPAA compliance.

Best HIPAA Compliant Email Software

What Is the Best HIPAA Compliant Email Software?

The best HIPAA compliant email software protects messages in transit and at rest, verifies identity with layered controls, records activity for audits, and connects cleanly with clinical systems. A service fits this description when encryption operates by default, authentication is strong but simple to use, logging is clear, and contracts map to HIPAA Privacy and Security Rule expectations so staff communicate without extra steps.

Why to seek out the Best HIPAA Compliant Email Software

Email carries scheduling details, follow ups, and billing questions from morning to close. The best HIPAA compliant email software keeps that flow steady by applying Transport Layer Security for server to server delivery and using message level encryption when a thread leaves trusted paths so only intended recipients can read the content. Identity needs careful handling through multi factor sign in, phishing resistant authenticators for sensitive roles, and session rules that make sense on shared workstations. Sender validation with SPF DKIM and DMARC reduces spoofing so patients and partner sites trust the name in the from line. When these elements run quietly in the background, teams move faster and errors linked to manual security steps fade.

Security Controls That Set Email Software Apart

HIPAA cites technical and administrative safeguards in 45 CFR 164.312 and 45 CFR 164.308. In practice this calls for access limits, audit trails, integrity checks, and transmission protection that does not rely on user memory. Default encryption policies remove guesswork during busy hours. Role based access narrows who can open attachments that carry imaging or lab data. Session timeouts that fit exam rooms and nursing stations reduce unattended access. The best HIPAA compliant email software turns these safeguards into daily behavior rather than optional features tucked inside menus, and that difference shows up in fewer service tickets and cleaner audits.

Contracts and Evidence

Any service that touches patient information requires a Business Associate Agreement with clear duties for data handling, incident reporting timelines, and return or deletion of information at contract end. Contract text needs to mirror access controls, audit controls, and transmission security in 45 CFR 164.312 along with administrative expectations in 45 CFR 164.308 so there is no gap between policy and reality. Independent examinations such as SOC 2 Type II or HITRUST provide outside confirmation that controls work as described, and written incident procedures with suitable insurance show preparation for hard days. Vendors that meet these barometers look much closer to the best HIPAA compliant email software because they can show how legal promises meet operational practice.

Integrations That Put Messages Into the Record

Care moves faster when messages land where work happens. Direct links to electronic health records place threads and attachments in the chart without copy and paste. Open APIs route patient replies and flags to the right queue so action follows quickly. Single sign on keeps access simple as clinicians move between rooms, and mobile access that preserves encryption and authentication lets providers respond away from a desk. When the inbox feels like part of the chart rather than a separate island, time spent juggling windows drops, and the best HIPAA compliant email software starts to feel invisible in the best possible way.

Administration and Support Built for Scale

Growth introduces rotating staff, new locations, and changing schedules. Administration needs clear role templates, delegated admin rights, and policy profiles that apply consistently across sites. Template management keeps patient facing messages consistent while allowing local details where needed. Support that guides DNS setup, archive import, and policy tuning shortens launch time and reduces rework. The best HIPAA compliant email software treats these operational pieces as first class concerns, which shows up later when a clinic adds a new line of service or merges with a partner and everything still works without a scramble.

Comparing the Best HIPAA Compliant Email Software

A focused pilot tells more than a long checklist. Test inside one service line and measure time to send a protected message, the rate at which patients open secure threads, and the steps needed to file conversations into the record. Track admin effort for onboarding, policy changes, and template updates. Review pricing beyond a seat line by including storage tiers, archive export, and support response times over a multi year term so totals stay predictable. Platforms that deliver encrypted transport, content protection when needed, dependable identity, complete logging, and clean connections to clinical systems will rise to the top, and that is where the best HIPAA compliant email software becomes easy to spot without naming vendors.

Budget Planning Without Surprises

Seat price rarely tells the whole story. Storage, export fees, and support commitments shape the total over time, as do retention rules that extend message life for legal or clinical reasons. Map these items to record policy and growth plans so expenses track reality. If a platform proves it can keep Protected Health Information private in motion and at rest, place messages into the chart without friction, and provide evidence that satisfies auditors, the decision gets simpler. In that situation the best HIPAA compliant email software supports daily communication while staying out of the way, which is exactly what busy clinics need.

How to Make Google Workspace HIPAA Compliant

How to Make Google Workspace HIPAA Compliant

Healthcare organizations can make Google Workspace HIPAA compliant by completing a Business Associate Agreement with Google, configuring advanced security settings, and training staff on proper data handling. Knowing how to make google workspace HIPAA compliant means understanding that compliance depends on both technology and human oversight. When these elements are managed carefully, Google Workspace can be used to handle Protected Health Information securely while maintaining efficiency and accessibility for healthcare teams.

The compliance framework

The process of learning how to make Google workspace HIPAA compliant begins with recognizing that Google provides the infrastructure, but the healthcare organization is responsible for compliance. The HIPAA Privacy and Security Rules require administrative, physical, and technical safeguards that must be applied through policy and configuration. Google Workspace, when managed under the right plan, offers encryption, access management, and detailed audit logs. To make google workspace HIPAA compliant, administrators must use the business version, not free Gmail accounts, because only paid Workspace plans allow for proper control and a Business Associate Agreement. Documented internal policies should define how messages, files, and calendars containing patient data are stored and monitored. Establishing this structure early makes every later compliance step easier to maintain.

The importance of the Business Associate Agreement

A Business Associate Agreement (BAA) is an unskippable step in how to make google workspace HIPAA compliant. Without it, compliance cannot be achieved regardless of system configuration. This legal contract specifies how Google protects healthcare data, reports incidents, and assists with investigations. The BAA covers key Workspace tools such as Gmail, Drive, Calendar, and Docs but excludes consumer products like YouTube and certain AI-based features. Administrators should disable any unsupported tools to prevent accidental data exposure. Reviewing and maintaining this agreement is essential to keeping google workspace HIPAA compliant as Google updates or expands its services. Many healthcare organizations include the BAA in their annual compliance review to confirm it still reflects current practices and security requirements.

Configuring strong security and access controls

Knowing how to make google workspace HIPAA compliant requires more than signing documents. It demands careful configuration of security controls that align with HIPAA’s technical safeguard requirements. Encryption should be enforced for all email traffic, and administrators should ensure that every account uses two-step verification. Device management policies can prevent unapproved computers or phones from connecting to accounts that contain Protected Health Information. Access privileges should be based on job roles so that staff only view the data they need to perform their duties. Audit logs can record sign-ins, file access, and configuration changes, giving compliance officers a clear view of user activity. Each of these steps contributes to a google workspace HIPAA compliant environment that protects against both external threats and internal misuse.

Maintaining compliance through user awareness and training

Even the most secure configuration cannot replace good judgment. A key part of how to make google workspace HIPAA compliant is ensuring that every staff member understands their responsibility when handling patient information. Training should explain how to identify Protected Health Information, when encryption is necessary, and how to report security incidents. Consistent reminders help prevent accidental sharing or unauthorized forwarding of sensitive messages. Regular audits of user activity can identify risks such as unused accounts, weak passwords, or improper storage of files. By reinforcing awareness and accountability, organizations maintain their google workspace HIPAA compliant status while reducing the risk of human error that can lead to violations.

Compliance is not a static condition but a continuous process. Administrators who understand how to make google workspace HIPAA compliant know that monitoring and documentation are required to sustain it. Google Workspace offers audit reports, security dashboards, and alerts that track sign-ins and encryption status. Reviewing these reports ensures that no settings are altered without authorization and that user activity remains within policy limits. Keeping written records of policy updates, staff training, and audit results helps demonstrate compliance during inspections. These records also create accountability and give leadership confidence that the system continues to operate within HIPAA standards. With diligent monitoring, a google workspace HIPAA compliant setup can stay reliable even as teams and technologies evolve.

A lasting culture of compliance

Organizations that learn how to make google workspace HIPAA compliant build more than a secure system—they create a sustainable culture of responsibility. Google Workspace allows healthcare professionals to collaborate, communicate, and share resources efficiently while safeguarding patient data. Maintaining this balance requires consistent review of settings, updates, and employee practices. As new regulations appear and technology develops, compliance officers should revisit each requirement to ensure ongoing protection. A well-managed, google workspace HIPAA compliant configuration supports both privacy and productivity, proving that regulatory compliance and convenience can coexist when oversight and education remain priorities.

HIPAA Compliant Email

Top HIPAA Compliant Email Use Cases for Medical Equipment Providers

For medical equipment providers – particularly those offering in-home care and delivery – rapid and reliable communication is critical. Whether you’re notifying patients about a new CPAP machine, reminding them of a delivery appointment, or sending a promotional offer on home oxygen supplies, email is still one of today’s most effective communication channels.

But, does your current email provider put you at risk?

Here’s the catch: when emails contain health-related information, i.e., protected health information (PHI), you must ensure you’re not just being effective, but that you’re secure and fully HIPAA-compliant as well. 

The good news: When you use secure, HIPAA compliant email correctly, you can ensure data privacy and security, while unlocking faster communication, improved patient or customer engagement, and better outcomes.

And you may even sleep better at night.

Let’s take a look at the most impactful use cases for HIPAA compliant email in the medical equipment space, and how secure, high volume email can optimize both the patient experience and your operations.

Why Email for Medical Equipment Providers

From ordering groceries to reading financial statements, consumers, including your patients and customers, already use email regularly. It’s familiar, simple, and trusted – and it doesn’t require installing applications or learning new tech.

For healthcare companies manufacturing and delivering home medical equipment, email is a fast, direct, and convenient way to communicate with your patients and customers. When used effectively and, most importantly, securely, secure email simply works.

HIPAA Compliance: A Catalyst for Communication – Not a Limitation

HIPAA compliance is often considered a hurdle to effective patient engagement via email. Fear of falling afoul of HIPAA regulations, and suffering the consequences of doing so, medical equipment suppliers can be reluctant to include PHI in their communications, missing out on opportunities to better connect with patients with personalized messages and relevant health information.

With the right HIPAA-compliant email solution, such as LuxSci, you can:

  • Send a variety of health-related info via email containing PHI – securely
  • Automate email workflows, such as order confirmations and refill reminders
  • Deliver more relevant marketing messages to carefully segmented target audiences
  • Scale your patient engagement campaigns with 98% delverability

HIPAA Compliant Email Use Cases for Medical Equipment Providers

Let’s take a closer look at some of the most common HIPAA compliant email use cases for medical equipments providers – all with 

Use Case #1: New Product Releases and Equipment Upgrades

Why It Matters: Keep patients informed and engaged.

Launching a new model of your leading CPAP machine? New upgraded insulin pumps with Bluetooth syncing? You can use secure email to safely inform existing patients about relevant product innovations that support their care and overall healthcare journey. At the same time, you can market your products and use email to help drive and grow your business.

Benefits

  • Personalized product recommendations and new offers
  • HIPAA-compliant messages and content with patient-specific data
  • Maximise cross-selling and up-selling opportunities

Use Case #2: Promotional Offers and Special Discounts

Why It Matters: Drive revenue without compliance risk

Yes, you can send promotional content with PHI. As long as you use HIPAA compliant email and obtain proper consent from your patients, you can send special offers for products, such as CPAP filters, replacement parts, or orthopaedic braces – securely and effectively.

Benefits

  • Boost reorder rates and upsells
  • Reach patients with personalized, secure marketing messages
  • Stand out from competitors that send out generic communications

Use Case #3: Order Confirmations and Delivery Updates

Why It Matters: Keep patients informed and deliver a good experience

When patients rely on home deliveries for critical medical equipment and supplies, timely and relevant updates are vital. HIPAA compliant email allows you to securely send:

  • Order confirmations
  • Delivery tracking links
  • Equipment setup instructions

Benefits

  • Peace of mind for patients and caregivers
  • Fewer support calls
  • Improved delivery and overall patient satisfaction

Use Case #4: Appointments and In-Home Service Reminders

Why It Matters: Reduce missed appointements and optimize scheduling

Whether it’s a CPAP fitting, oxygen tank swap, or home nurse visits, appointment reminders keep patients informed and prevent delays in care delivery and schedules.

HIPAA compliant appointment emails can include:

  • Patient names and appointment details
  • Secure rescheduling links
  • Technician or home nurse arrival windows

Benefits

  • Fewer missed visits
  • Improved care continuity
  • Better coordination with caregivers
  • Enhanced patient satisfaction and trust 

Use Case #5: Payment Reminders and Billing Notices

Why It Matters: Accelerate revenue collection

Secure email makes it easy to send billing statements, insurance updates, or out-of-pocket payment reminders related to medical equipment and in-home care – even when they contain PHI or medical codes.

Benefits

  • Faster payment collections
  • Reduced billing confusion
  • Clear and compliant patient communications

Use Case #6: New Supply and Refill Reminders

Why It Matters: Promote adherence and retention

Don’t wait for patients to run out of critical supplies. Use automated, HIPAA compliant email to remind them it’s time to reorder medical products and/or supplies.

Benefits

  • Better patient outcomes
  • Higher reorder rates
  • Lower administrative overhead 

LuxSci HIPAA-Compliant Email for Medical Equipment Providers

HIPAA-compliant email is no longer optional, it’s essential, especially for modern medical equipment providers who want to provide the best possible experience for their patients, optimize operations, and retain an edge in an increasingly competitive healthcare landscape. 

For medical equipment providers delivering in-home care or direct-to-patient services, secure email enables smarter, faster, and more personalized communications – all in a secure, HIPAA compliant way on one of today’s most used communications channels.

With LuxSci, you can embrace email communication with confidence, safe in the knowledge that your messages are secure, compliant, and your emails are high-performing and effective. 

LuxSci Offers:

  • Automated encryption (TLS, Secure Portal Pickup, PGP, S/MIME).
  • SMTP and API integration, with EHRs, CRMs, and billing systems.
  • Automated workflows, for intelligent patient engagement.
  • High-volume email capabilities, for new product offers, upgrades, and promotions.
  • Signed BAA and full HIPAA compliance built in.

Whether you’re serving 100 patients or 100,000, LuxSci securely scales with you. Contact us to supercharge your engagement efforts today. 


Medical Equipment Providers Secure Email Use Cases FAQs

Can I send promotional emails about medical Equipment under HIPAA?

Yes, you can. With proper patient consent and a HIPAA-compliant email solution with a signed BAA, you can securely send personalized promotional messages.

Is it safe to include order or delivery details in emails?

Yes, when using a secure, encrypted email solution like LuxSci, you can send PHI, delivery info, and tracking links without violating HIPAA regulations.

Do patients need to log into a portal to read secure emails?

Not necessarily. LuxSci supports multiple delivery methods, including TLS-encrypted direct delivery and secure pickup portals, giving you and your patients options in regards to delivering and reading emails, respectively.

Can LuxSci help automate reminders and email flows?

Absolutely! LuxSci supports automated workflows, APIs, and integrations to trigger reminders, alerts, and follow-ups based on email engagement and recipient actions.

How does secure email impact revenue?

Secure email helps you increase reorder rates, reduce billing friction, and improve patient engagement, all of which can lead to increased revenue.

You Might Also Like

What is HIPAA compliant email?

How To Send HIPAA Compliant Emails

Knowing how to send HIPAA Compliant Emails is a critical requirement for healthcare providers, payers and suppliers dealing with protected health information (PHI). With fines reaching into the millions, non-compliance isn’t something you want to risk when engaging with our customers and prospects. Unfortunately, many organizations fall into the trap of believing they’re sending HIPAA compliant email because they’ve applied what we call “self-certification” strategies—without fully understanding what’s required to be compliant.

Are you 100% sure that you’re sending HIPAA compliant emails and understand HIPAA email rules?

In this blog post, we’ll delve into the risks of being non-compliant, explain why self-certification strategies often lead to problems, and provide a HIPAA-compliant email checklist to help ensure your organization avoids the pitfalls self-compliance.

The Importance of Sending HIPAA Compliant Emails

HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act) was established to ensure the protection and privacy of patients’ PHI. This law mandates that any entity handling PHI must implement strict safeguards to prevent unauthorized access, breaches, and exposure of sensitive patient data.

In today’s digital world, where healthcare communications often take place over email and other digital platforms, maintaining HIPAA compliance becomes even more complex. It’s not enough to merely think you’re compliant; you must be able to prove it beyond a doubt.

What Is PHI and Why Does It Need to Be Protected?

As a quick reminder, PHI refers to any data that can be used to identify an individual and that relates to their past, present, or future health condition. This can include anything from personal identification info to medical records and billing information to email exchanges that reference patient care.

Examples of PHI include:

  • Names
  • Addresses
  • Birth dates
  • Social Security numbers
  • Medical history and diagnoses
  • Treatment plans & prescriptions
  • Medical device usage and services
  • Appointment information
  • Billing, payments and insurance information

The Risks of Not Being 100% Sure About HIPAA Compliance

In addition to losing sleep at night, the consequences of sending non-compliant emails can be significant. Non-compliance can result in hefty penalties, ranging from $100 to $50,000 per violation, depending on the severity and intent. In some cases, these fines can even surpass $1.5 million annually.

But it’s not just the fines—PHI exposure opens the door to a variety of serious risks, including the reputational damage that can stem from breaches of patient data that can impact peoples’ lives and the future of your business. Patients place immense trust in healthcare providers and organizations to safeguard their sensitive information, which stretches beyond HIPAA-compliance to overall data security and privacy. The loss of patient trust is difficult—if not impossible—to regain once compromised.

The Problem with DIY HIPAA Compliance

Simply put, self-certifying HIPAA compliance is a recipe for disaster. Many companies and healthcare organizations falsely believe that if they conduct an internal review or have implemented basic security measures, they’re fully compliant. But without the right expertise and the right HIPAA compliant infrastructure in place, especially encryption, it’s easy to overlook details.

Even if you have encryption in place or think your emails are safe, these minimal steps can create a false sense of security. True HIPAA compliance requires continuous monitoring, updating of policies, and regular training to address potential risks.

A Checklist for Sending HIPAA Compliant Email

Sending HIPAA compliant email means ensuring you’ve implemented the following safeguards:

1. Encryption Standards for HIPAA Compliance

All emails containing PHI must be encrypted both at rest and in transit—end-to-end. Ensure your email service provider offers high-grade encryption protocols, like TLS (Transport Layer Security), for sending and receiving messages, and flexible options, including dedicated cloud infrastuctures for the highest levels of data protection.

2. Secure Access and Authentication

Set up multi-factor authentication (MFA) and role-based access controls to limit who can access emails containing PHI.

3. Business Associate Agreements (BAA)

If you’re using a third-party email provider, you must have a signed BAA. This agreement ensures that the provider will uphold HIPAA’s security standards.

4. Data Backup and Recovery

Make sure your email system has a secure backup and recovery solution. Data breaches can happen, but having a recovery plan will minimize damage and maintain compliance.

5. Employee Training and Awareness

Ensure your employees are regularly trained on HIPAA guidelines. Human error is a leading causes of HIPAA violations, so proper education is key.

6. Regularly Audit Your HIPAA Compliance Strategy & Practices

HIPAA regulations evolve as technology advances. Conducting regular compliance audits ensures your security protocols are up to date with the latest best practices.

7. Avoiding Overconfidence in Your Own Processes

No matter how confident you are in your HIPAA strategy, bringing in an external auditor can provide an unbiased view of your compliance status and help identify overlooked vulnerabilities.

Don’t Let HIPAA Self-Certification Fool You!

HIPAA compliance is not something you can afford to be unsure about. The risks—both financially and reputationally—are too great. While it may be tempting to “self-certify” or assume your current measures are sufficient, doing so can leave your organization—and your patients and customers—vulnerable. Instead, ensure that you follow a comprehensive strategy that includes best-in-class email encryption, secure access, regular audits, employee training, and support from external experts.

Don’t take shortcuts when it comes to protecting sensitive health information and ensuring HIPAA compliance—get it right from the start.

If you’d like to get your questions on sending HIPAA compliant email answered, don’t hesitate to reach out to talk with one of our experts—and learn more about the healthcare industry’s leading HIPAA-compliant email, text and marketing solutions from LuxSci.

HIPAA Marketing Compliance

What Are the HIPAA Marketing Compliance Requirements?

HIPAA marketing compliance requires healthcare organizations to obtain written patient authorization before using protected health information for promotional communications, with strict exceptions for treatment communications, appointment reminders, and health-related benefits descriptions. Organizations must distinguish between permissible healthcare operations communications and restricted promotional activities, ensuring that any PHI used for advertising purposes receives explicit patient consent through properly executed authorization forms that detail the intended use, recipients, and patient rights.

Healthcare organizations tend to struggle with the boundary between acceptable patient communications and prohibited promotional activities. Marketing materials that reference patient experiences, treatment outcomes, or demographic information without proper authorization create immediate HIPAA marketing compliance violations.

Authorization Requirements & Marketing Boundaries

Written patient authorization must precede any use of PHI for promotional purposes, including testimonials, case studies, or targeted advertising campaigns. These authorization forms must specify the exact information to be used, identify recipients of the promotional materials, and explain the patient’s right to revoke consent at any time. Healthcare organizations cannot condition treatment or payment on patients providing authorization for promotional activities.

Authorization forms require language elements including expiration dates, patient signature requirements, and clear descriptions of how PHI will be used in promotional contexts. Organizations must maintain signed authorization documents and respect revocation requests immediately upon receipt, stopping all ongoing promotional activities involving that patient’s information.

Treatment Communications Receive Different Standards

Healthcare organizations can communicate directly with patients about treatment alternatives, appointment scheduling, and health-related services without obtaining separate authorization. These communications fall under treatment or healthcare operations rather than promotional activities, allowing providers to send appointment reminders, medication adherence information, and preventive care notifications without additional consent.

Communications that promote third-party products, include financial incentives for referrals, or advertise non-medical services require authorization even when sent to existing patients. Organizations must evaluate each communication to determine whether it serves legitimate healthcare purposes or constitutes promotional activity requiring consent.

Third-Party Vendor Relationships Create Additional Obligations

BAAs with promotional vendors must address PHI handling requirements and specify permitted uses of patient information. Vendors creating promotional materials, managing patient communications, or analyzing treatment data for promotional purposes need appropriate legal frameworks governing their access to protected information.

Healthcare organizations are liable for vendor compliance failures, making careful selection and monitoring of promotional partners essential. Contracts must include breach notification procedures, data destruction requirements, and audit rights to ensure HIPAA marketing compliance with patient information protection standards.

Challenges of Digital Advertising Platforms

Social media advertising, email campaigns, and online promotional activities often involve sharing patient data with technology platforms that may not meet HIPAA requirements. Healthcare organizations must avoid uploading patient contact lists, demographic information, or treatment details to advertising platforms without proper authorization and business associate agreements.

Retargeting campaigns that track patient website visits or online behavior require careful evaluation to ensure no PHI is shared with advertising networks. Organizations should implement protections to prevent accidental transmission of patient information through website analytics, social media pixels, or advertising platform integration.

Patient Testimonials and Case Studies

Using patient stories, photographs, or treatment outcomes in promotional materials requires detailed authorization forms that specify exactly how patient information will be used. These authorizations must address potential future uses, distribution channels, and the duration of consent to prevent compliance violations when promotional materials are repurposed or distributed broadly.

De-identification of patient information offers an alternative to authorization but requires removing all identifying elements according to HIPAA standards. Organizations must ensure that demographic information, treatment dates, and outcome details cannot be combined to identify patients when creating promotional case studies or success stories.

Staff Training & HIPAA Marketing Compliance Violations

Employees involved in promotional activities need training on distinguishing between permissible healthcare communications and restricted promotional activities. Staff must understand authorization requirements, recognize when business associate agreements are necessary, and identify situations requiring legal review before implementing promotional campaigns.

Training updates address new promotional channels, new technology platforms, and changing regulatory interpretations of HIPAA requirements. Organizations should establish clear approval processes for promotional materials and designate compliance personnel to review campaigns before launch.

Common Violations

Recent OCR enforcement cases display the penalties incurred for using patient information in promotional materials without authorization, sharing PHI with advertising vendors without business associate agreements, and failing to honor patient requests to opt out of promotional communications. These violations result in significant financial penalties and corrective action requirements.

Healthcare organizations face scrutiny of their promotional activities, particularly digital advertising campaigns and patient outreach programs. Compliance programs must include audits of promotional materials, vendor relationships, and patient authorization procedures to identify and address potential violations before they result in enforcement actions.

HIPAA Emailing Medical Records

What Are The Requirements For HIPAA Emailing Medical Records?

HIPAA emailing medical records mandate that healthcare organizations implement encryption, access controls, and audit protections when transmitting protected health information electronically. Organizations must obtain patient authorization for medical record disclosures, ensure secure transmission methods, and maintain detailed logs of all email activities involving PHI to comply with Privacy and Security Rule obligations. Medical record transmission via email has become routine in healthcare operations, yet many organizations struggle with balancing convenience and compliance requirements. Understanding specific HIPAA obligations for email communications helps healthcare providers avoid costly violations while maintaining efficient patient care workflows.

Patient Authorization and Disclosure Requirements

Patient access rights under HIPAA allow individuals to request copies of their medical records in electronic format, including email delivery when requested. Healthcare organizations must honor these requests within 30 days and cannot require patients to provide justification for their preferred delivery method. Third-party disclosures require explicit patient authorization before medical records can be emailed to family members, attorneys, or other healthcare providers. These authorizations must specify what records will be shared, with whom, and for what purpose to ensure HIPAA compliance with privacy standards. Minimum necessary standards apply to HIPAA emailing medical records, requiring healthcare organizations to limit disclosures to only the information needed for the intended purpose. Complete medical records should only be shared when specifically authorized or when the entire record is necessary for the disclosed purpose.

Encryption Standards and Message Security

End-to-end encryption provides the strongest protection for medical records transmitted via email by ensuring that only authorized recipients can access patient information. This encryption method protects data throughout the entire transmission process, including temporary storage on email servers. Transport layer security protects medical records during transmission between email servers but may not encrypt messages while stored on recipient systems. Healthcare organizations should verify that this level of protection meets their risk tolerance and patient expectations for privacy. Secure portal delivery offers an alternative to direct email transmission by providing encrypted storage where patients or authorized recipients can access medical records through password-protected websites. This method maintains organization control over access and provides detailed audit trails.

Identity Verification and Recipient Authentication

Patient identity confirmation helps ensure that HIPAA emailing medical records reach intended recipients and prevents unauthorized disclosure to wrong email addresses. Healthcare organizations should implement verification procedures that confirm patient identity before emailing sensitive medical information. Recipient authentication systems verify that authorized individuals access emailed medical records rather than unintended recipients who might gain access through shared email accounts or compromised systems. Multi-factor authentication provides additional security layers for sensitive record access. Email address validation helps prevent medical record disclosure to incorrect recipients due to typographical errors or outdated contact information. Healthcare organizations should confirm email addresses with patients before transmitting medical records electronically.

Record Integrity and Transmission Controls

Digital signatures help ensure that medical records remain unchanged during email transmission and provide verification that documents originated from legitimate healthcare sources. These signatures help recipients confirm record authenticity and detect any unauthorized modifications. File format standards help ensure that emailed medical records can be accessed by recipients while maintaining security protections. PDF formats with password protection offer good compatibility while providing basic security controls for medical record transmission. Attachment size limitations may require healthcare organizations to split large medical records across multiple email messages or use alternative delivery methods. These constraints must be managed while maintaining record completeness and patient access rights.

Audit Trail and Documentation Obligations

Transmission logs must capture detailed information about medical record email activities including sender identity, recipient addresses, transmission timestamps, and record types shared. These logs support compliance monitoring and provide documentation for potential breach investigations. Access tracking helps healthcare organizations monitor who views emailed medical records and when access occurs. This information supports audit requirements and helps identify potential unauthorized access to patient information shared via email. Retention policies for email logs and transmitted medical records must align with state and federal requirements while supporting potential legal discovery and compliance audit needs. Healthcare organizations should establish clear schedules for maintaining and disposing of HIPAA emailing medical records transmission records.

Managing Failed Deliveries and Bounced Messages

Error handling procedures must protect medical record information when email transmissions fail or bounce back to senders. Healthcare organizations need policies for managing failed deliveries that prevent PHI exposure through error messages or automated responses. Alternative delivery methods should be available when email transmission fails to ensure that patients receive requested medical records within required timeframes. These backup procedures might include secure portals, encrypted file transfer, or physical mail delivery options. Notification protocols help healthcare organizations inform patients when medical record email deliveries fail while maintaining confidentiality about record contents. These communications should provide alternative access methods without revealing specific medical information in potentially unsecured messages.

Staff Training and Policy Implementation

Email usage policies must provide clear guidance for healthcare personnel about when and how to issue HIPAA emailing medical records while maintaining HIPAA compliance. These policies should address authorization requirements, encryption standards, and procedures for handling transmission errors. User training programs should cover both the mechanics of secure email transmission and the regulatory requirements for medical record disclosure. Staff need to understand patient rights, authorization procedures, and security measures required for different types of record sharing. Compliance monitoring helps healthcare organizations identify policy violations and training needs related to medical record email transmission.

Google Business Email HIPAA Compliant

Understanding Business Associate Agreements (BAAs) and Shared Responsibility

Modern-day healthcare organizations rely on a growing array of partners and vendors to provide them with the tools they need to effectively serve patients and customers. 

 

However, while new digital solutions and healthcare ecosystems often result in greater productivity and efficiency, they also increase the number of third parties a company must communicate with and share protected health information (PHI), requiring a business associate agreement (BAA). Unfortunately, this increases the risk of PHI being exposed, as it increases a healthcare organization’s supply chain network and the number of external organizations with access to their data, significantly raising the risk of a security breach. 

 

This is where the concept of shared responsibility comes in. 

 

In this article, we explore the shared responsibility model for data security, explaining the concept, the role of a BAA in shared responsibility, and why healthcare companies need to know how it works and where it factors into their HIPAA compliance efforts. 

What Is The Shared Responsibility Model? 

Shared responsibility is a core data security principle that divides the responsibility for protecting data between a company that collects the data and a vendor that supplies the infrastructure or systems used to process said data.

 

The shared responsibility model grew in prominence as more companies moved to cloud-based environments and applications. In the past, when companies kept their systems and data onsite, they had more control over who could access their data and, subsequently, a better ability to mitigate data security risks.

 

However, in adopting cloud-based infrastructure and applications, companies have to process and store their data in the cloud – often in shared infrastructure with other vendors using the same cloud – which consequently shifts some of the responsibility of information security to the cloud service provider (CSP) itself. This marked a profound shift in the way data was handled, transmitted, and stored – necessitating an evolved approach to data security. 

 

This fundamental shift in the way companies consume infrastructure and use apps ushered in the shared responsibility model: Where the cloud vendor provides the infrastructure or application, including HIPAA compliant and high secure environments, but it’s still the responsibility of the client to configure and use it securely. 

Business Associate Agreements (BAAs) and Shared Responsibility

By detailing the respective responsibilities of healthcare companies or Covered Entities (CEs) and their vendors or Business Associates (BAs) in securing PHI, a Business Associate Agreement is a prime example of shared responsibility. 

 

For example, the Business Associate shoulders the responsibility of providing the data safeguards required by HIPAA to secure patient data, such as infrastructure, encryption, audit logging, and even physical onsite security.

 

The Covered Entity, meanwhile, is responsible for conducting risk assessments, defining access control policies and processes, configuring services accordingly, workforce training, and continuous monitoring.

Additionally, both parties have the obligation to report security incidents to each other, as well as being independently accountable to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).

Why Shared Responsibility Is Essential for HIPAA Compliance

For healthcare companies, having a firm grasp of the shared responsibility model for safeguarding and securing PHI, and how they fit within your overall security posture is essential (for two key reasons).  

Security Gaps

Firstly, clearly understanding the shared responsibility decreases the likelihood of security gaps. If CEs are under the impression that the vendor handles all aspects of data security, they won’t be as vigilant. They’ll be less inclined to configure services, educate their staff accordingly, pay appropriate attention to vendor security alerts, etc. 

 

But the same is also true for BAs: If they assume their client does most of the heavy lifting in securing the data disclosed to them, they could be remiss in their duties to protect it. Without shared responsibility, each side simply assumes the other is covering a safeguard, opening the door for security gaps that malicious actors can exploit.

 

Fortunately, by detailing both parties’ (CEs and BAs) responsibilities and liabilities regarding data protection, a BAA removes this ambiguity and, more importantly, reduces the risk of security gaps. It’s critical to know the details and work with vendors building products for compliance versus implementing a tick-box approach to compliance that places too much burden on the CE.

Covered Entities (CEs) Are Ultimately Accountable

Subsequently, the second reason why it’s essential for CEs to understand the shared responsibility model, and increase their cybersecurity readiness accordingly, is that it’s the CE that’s ultimately held accountable for data breaches. 

 

Mistakenly thinking that a BAA automatically makes them compliant may result in healthcare companies underinvesting in training, monitoring, and incident response. Conversely, understanding that even with a BAA in place, they’re the ones primarily accountable for protecting PHI gives them a greater sense of urgency to properly implement HIPAA compliant security measures. 

The Covered Entity’s Role Within Shared Responsibility

Let’s look at the ways that healthcare companies have to hold up their end in the shared responsibility model. 

Choose Compliance-Conscious Vendors 

First and foremost, companies have to choose the right vendors to supply them with HIPAA compliant services and solutions.

 

Look for companies that market themselves as HIPAA compliant and display a detailed understanding of HIPAA requirements, particularly the HIPAA Security Rule. Do your due diligence and perform deeper dives on potential vendors, researching their stated security features, reviews from existing clients, whether they have certifications like HITRUST – and if they’ve been involved in any data breaches. 

 

Naturally, a core prerequisite of being a HIPAA compliant vendor is being willing to sign a BAA, so you can immediately rule out any vendors not willing to do so. For instance, some healthcare companies may assume they can use widely adopted solutions such as SendGrid, Mailchimp, but they don’t offer a BAA. 

 

Once you’ve confirmed a vendor offers a BAA, look through it to establish its terms and determine if it covers the services you’re interested in. 

Configuration 

Another core component of shared responsibility is comprehensive configuration management. While the BA’s responsibility is to provide a secure solution that satisfies HIPAA requirements, it’s the CE’s responsibility to configure it securely to fit within their IT ecosystem. 

Features that often require configuration include: 

 

  • Access control: Role-based access, Zero Trust, Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA).
  • Encryption settings: Enabling encryption, choosing encryption type, enforcing forced TLS, enabling storage encryption.
  • Feature restrictions: Disabling default configurations that enable integration with non-compliant tools. 
  • Audit logging: Enabling audit logging and configuring log formats.
  • Retention settings: How long to retain audit logs and who is permitted to review them.

Finally, establishing a patch management strategy, i.e., when and how your organization applies software updates, is an important element of configuration.  While the vendor must release updates to fix security vulnerabilities discovered in their solutions, it’s up to healthcare companies to deploy the patches. 

Training

Regardless of how many security features a vendor bakes into their solutions, once deployed by a healthcare company, the tool is only as secure as the practices of their least security-conscious employee. Consequently, companies must train their staff on how to properly use a solution to process protected health information and sensitive data. The more an employee is required to handle PHI, the more thorough and frequent their training should be. 

 

Key aspects of comprehensive cybersecurity training include:

 

  • Common cyber threats: what the most prevalent cyber threats are and how to recognize them.
  • Incident response: how to report a suspected security incident, i.e., who to contact and when. 
  • Specific solution training: how to securely use systems that process PHI
  • Scope awareness: knowing which services within your organization’s IT ecosystem are HIPAA-compliant and which are not

Reporting 

Although both healthcare companies and BAs have notification obligations to the HHS in the event of a data breach involving PHI, it’s the CE that bears most of the investigative burden. 

 

Firstly, while a BA may report a security incident, it’s the CE’s responsibility to conduct a risk assessment to determine the probability of compromise of PHI, assess risk, and determine whether an official notification of a breach to HHS is necessary.

 

Secondly, BAs must notify the CE without unreasonable delay and no later than 60 days after discovery. Although BAs often wait to complete internal investigations before notifying the CE, the CE’s 60-day clock starts upon the BA’s discovery, not upon the BA’s report. Therefore, BA delays can create compliance risks for the CE.

 

To prevent this, where possible, you can include stricter contractual reporting timelines in the BAAs. This constantly keeps your company in the loop, ensuring you have sufficient lead time to complete your own investigations and your HIPAA-regulated deadlines.

LuxSci – Secure Healthcare Communications

Developed specifically to fulfil the stringent regulatory and ever-evolving data security needs of the healthcare sector, LuxSci’s secure email, text, marketing and forms solutions help companies protect PHI and personalize communications.  

 

Equally as importantly, instead of leaving you to “figure it out” – pushing additional responsibility back onto your company – LuxSci has a reputation for the best customer support in the business, offering onboarding, detailed documentation, secure default configurations, and ongoing support to help navigate the murky waters of HIPAA compliance, while getting best-in-class performance out of your solution.

 

Contact LuxSci today to learn more or get a demo.