Healthcare providers using cloud services may need to implement further privacy training
The Department of Health and Human Services has long sought to promote privacy and security for patient files. The cloud, due to its ability to reduce information technology costs for healthcare practitioners, may become a tool for the medical industry. However, care providers that use the cloud may have to administer further regulatory training.
According to Tech News World, doctors and hospitals are charged with securely transferring patient files. This is a provision of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, which is aimed at providing a secure means to store personal medical information.
The cloud may force healthcare organizations to create an extra security channel, reports the news source. Cloud service providers, which are a third party and a critical part of the health information's exchange, may have to undergo HIPPA training to protect the integrity of health information transferred.
The suggestion for more HIPPA training among cloud providers may be in response to its growing use by the medical profession. According to Health Digest News, 73 percent of healthcare IT directors are considering cloud services for their practices.
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