While some physicians are cautious to place patient records on cloud-based electronic health record systems due to potential hacking, unauthorized access/disclosure and actual hacking of EHRs only constituted 22 percent of HIPAA violations, the report said.
The report also noted that cloud-based EHR systems have all data stored on the software company’s server off site, but 75 percent of the HIPAA breach locations were on-site computers or hard drives and paper records. Only 12 percent of breach locations involved computer networks.
Read the Software Advice article on HIPAA violations.
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