
The HIPAA compliant resources on this page will give you the advantage you need to start to assess the status of your compliance. Our free tools and educational resources come from the top HIPAA experts in the country who are working with us to help you succeed. Please feel free to download and utilize our HIPAA compliant resources – and to contact us directly if you have any questions about becoming HIPAA compliant.
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Critical Role of Health Information Management Training
Physicians, nurses, and other medical providers aren’t the only professionals who must demonstrate conscientious health information management. All individuals who handle sensitive data need regular and comprehensive training to understand the proper [...]
Streamline Your Hiring with Healthcare Onboarding Software
Reducing turnover rates and providing proper training are among the top goals when hiring new employees. The onboarding process is pivotal in ensuring employees understand their job duties, engage in best cybersecurity [...]
What Compliance Officers Need to Know About Stark Laws in Healthcare
Many compliance violations in healthcare arise from financial conflicts of interest, particularly when providers get kickbacks or achieve financial gain from their referral services. With the establishment of Stark Law in healthcare, [...]
OIG Compliance Program Guidance for Clinical Laboratories
Understanding the Office of Inspector General’s (OIG) focus is crucial for clinical laboratories seeking to secure and maintain operational integrity and avoid costly penalties while navigating the complexities of compliance regulations. [...]
Management of Hospital Policies and Procedures
About 400,000 hospitalized patients annually experience harm that was preventable. A lack of consistent, up-to-date, efficient, and easy-to-follow hospital policies and procedures creates opportunities for a host of problems. From patient safety [...]
The Role Incident Management Policies Play
Bad incident management could mean total losses that reach $100,000 or more for general incidents, and it can often mean $20 billion in losses from actual medical errors. Poor incident reporting practices [...]
















