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Good Faith Compliance is No Longer Enough

What is HIPAA compliance?

HIPAA now has stricter and more explicit requirements. Especially as enforcement expectations tighten. This is changing how medical practices and business associates operate day to day. The big shift is that “good faith” compliance is no longer enough. Regulators now expect documented and continuously maintained compliance.

Compliance Must Be Documented, Not Assumed

Organizations can no longer rely on informal policies, verbal training, or “we’ve always done it this way.”

Written risk analyses, risk management plans, and policies have always been required. But now, regulators are closely reviewing for updates. Documents must be current, not created once and forgotten.

If it’s not documented, Office for Civil Rights treats it as if it doesn’t exist.

Impact: More time spent maintaining documentation, but far less exposure during an audit or complaint.

Risk Analysis Is the Foundation of Everything

The Office for Civil Rights (OCR) has made it crystal clear that risk analysis drives compliance decisions. Security controls must align with identified risks. Then a documented risk management plan that outlines the mitigation process must be created. “Addressable” safeguards must be justified if not implemented, this was never meant to be optional! Generic or copied risk analyses are being rejected.

Impact: Organizations must understand their systems, vendors, workflows, and vulnerabilities – not someone else’s.

Cybersecurity Expectations Are Higher

HIPAA now expects organizations to adopt modern security practices, not outdated basics.

  • Multi-factor authentication (MFA)
  • Encryption of data at rest and in transit
  • Regular patching and system hardening
  • Monitoring for suspicious activity

Failing to implement common-sense safeguards is increasingly viewed as willful neglect.

Impact: Greater reliance on IT partners, but also more oversight and accountability.

Vendors and Business Associates Are Under a Microscope

Practices are responsible for who they share PHI with. Business Associate Agreements (BAAs) must be current. Business associates must have current subcontractor agreements in place as well. Vendors must demonstrate their own security practices and comply with the HIPAA rules. “We trusted our vendor” is no longer a defense. Covered entities are responsible for ensuring their vendors are compliant.

Impact: More vendor vetting, more paperwork, fewer risky shortcuts.

Training Must Be Ongoing

Annual, generic HIPAA training doesn’t cut it anymore. Training must address phishing, ransomware, and real-world threats. Training must be tracked and documented.

Impact: Better-informed staff equals fewer costly human-error breaches.

Faster Response and Accountability After Incidents

HIPAA enforcement now scrutinizes how quickly and effectively a practice responds to incidents. Incident response plans must exist before an event occurs. Delays or confusion during a breach increases penalties. Internal security incident investigations must be documented.

Impact: Organizations need clear procedures, not panic, when something goes wrong.

Small Practices Are No Longer “Too Small to Enforce”

Enforcement actions increasingly involve:

  • Small and solo practices
  • Dental offices
  • Specialty clinics
  • Business associates

Complaints, not breaches often trigger investigations.

Impact: Every organization is expected to meet the same baseline standards, regardless of size.

Summary

HIPAA’s stricter requirements mean organizations must shift from reactive compliance to ongoing risk management.

Aris Medical Solutions helps medical practices and business associates understand HIPAA expectations and reduce risk- step by step.

Our HIPAA Keeper was designed to help organizations:

  • Understand where they stand
  • Organize required documentation
  • Maintain compliance over time
  • Be prepared if questions ever arise

Additionally, you will have a HIPAA security analyst to guide and assist you when you need help.

To find out where you stand with your compliance, schedule a free HIPAA checkup today at Aris Medical Solutions.

About Suze Shaffer

Suze Shaffer is the owner and president of Aris Medical Solutions. She specializes in HIPAA compliance, risk management, and cyber security. She believes that by educating her clients in understanding why and what needs to be done to protect their practice they have a better outcome.

Suze has been instrumental in helping clients nationwide with risk management, implementing privacy and security rule policies and procedures, and ultimately protecting patient data. She includes state and federal regulatory requirements to ensure clients are protected in all areas.

She has spoken at numerous conferences and functions. She continues to educate organizations how to minimize the risks of data breaches. HIPAA compliance is not an option, it is mandatory for every organization that comes in contact with protected health information to have reasonable and appropriate security measures in place. Unfortunately, most organizations don’t realize they are not compliant until they suffer a data breach or they are faced with an audit or investigation.

Did you know that the Office for Civil Rights (OCR) is the agency that investigates data breaches? Have you seen the heavy fines that have been imposed for non-compliance?

All 50 states now have their own set of privacy laws and the State's Attorney General may also investigate privacy violations!

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April 2, 2026
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