Why the cloud is the safest place to store medical records

By Admin
As with all medical practices, big-name hospitals like Boston General and Stanford Hospital are bound by HIPAA, the federally-mandate Health Insurance P...

As with all medical practices, big-name hospitals like Boston General and Stanford Hospital are bound by HIPAA, the federally-mandate Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act.

Among other measures, HIPAA gives strict regulations for the sharing, transporting, storing and accessing of patients' medical records.

As responsible medical facilities, hospitals can almost guarantee that patient records are secure.

Data breaches in the news

Still, many patients are unnerved by the sheer number of data breaches covering the fronts of news sites.

RELATED TOPIC: 4 reasons to take your medical records to the cloud

Just recently, the United States Federal Government had to admit to having thousands of federal workers' data compromised in one of the brashest data hacks in history. The perpetrators remain at large.

Patients nervous about records

It's harder than ever for hospitals to calm the nerves of patients in the wake of these headline grabbing stories.

As the article “Easing patient security fears about electronic medical records” states, this is no small task, and hospitals are taking it as seriously as they take patients' health in general.

Though by law all medical records have to be digitized and stored on the cloud for easy and speedy accessibility, the myriad security fronts in place of that data are multitudinous and redundant.

In other words, there is not just one firewall, or one password, or one of anything.

There are duplications, and a variety of differing digital blockades that make it near impossible for hackers to get in.

RELATED TOPIC: 7 HIPAA security risk myths debunked

Records not a target

Another small fact that should put patients' minds at ease is that hackers are looking for money, not medical information.

Medical information is stored separately from any credit card data or personal banking information.

To target hospital data, hackers would only garner a patient's history of diabetes, or the resulting diagnosis from an MRI. This kind of information is virtually useless in terms of turning it into any kind of money-making scheme.

So in fact, medical data isn't even a realistic target for hackers who are out to steal money, which they are.

Why HIPAA exists

Though it's true that most data breaches these days are breaches of electronic data and not paper records, there are so many reasons why hospital patient records are not on the list of usual targets.

RELATED TOPIC: How cloud computing is changing the health care IT industry

And if they were, HIPAA's safeguards are in place to ensure that there are layers upon layers of protection so that medical data is safe.

In fact, that's one of the main reasons why HIPAA was passed into law. Helping to make sure that patients and their teams of medical professionals all have access to pertinent information is paramount to HIPAA's mission statement.

There is virtually no better place for a patient's medical records than safely stored on the cloud.

About the author: Kate Supino is widely published and writes extensively about best business practices

Let's connect!   

Read the latest edition of Healthcare Global magazine!

Share

Featured Articles

McKinsey: Women More Likely to die of Heart Attack Than Men

McKinsey Health Institute's Lucy Pérez says cardiovascular disease top killer of women yet physicians don't know their heart attack symptoms are different

Novo Nordisk Buys $1bn Cardior in CardioVascular Move

As Novo Nordisk expands into heart medicines, we profile the Danish pharma giant who in 1923 was the first to make insulin commercially available

Shoddy Chinese Syringes Sees BD Ramp-up Production

Becton Dickinson – a major supplier of syringes – said it has upped manufacturing in its US facilities after FDA warning on China-made products

AI Tool 'Picks up Early-stage Breast Cancers Doctors Missed'

Technology & AI

AstraZeneca Buys $2bn Fusion in Next-gen Cancer Drugs Move

Medical Devices & Pharma

Eli Lilly and Amazon Pharmacy Partner on Drugs Delivery

Digital Healthcare