06-19-12 | Blog Post
Last week, Eric Wicklund, Editor of mHIMSS.org reported on new tools for physicians and patients to support payment processing and the ability to check insurance eligibility while using an iPad, iPhone or iPod Touch.
These tools must, by nature of their industry and function, satisfy both PCI DSS (Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard) compliance (to accept credit card payments) and HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act) compliance (to protect personally identifiable and patient health information).
The company that developed these tools is drchrono, a California-based company known initially for developing an electronic health record (EHR) system for the iPad. This new realm of mobile devices and the need for multi-compliance is an emerging trend that requires a layered security approach to meet each standard.
This particular tool works in conjunction with another company’s tool, called Square. The actual device is a card reader that, once plugged into a mobile device audio jack, allows credit card data to be collected with a mere swipe. The transaction goes directly to the physician’s or practice’s bank account, and is updated in their practice management system. Physicians can also check health insurance eligibility in real-time using the tool.
What does this mean for service providers previously supporting e-commerce and healthcare industries separately? No longer can hosting providers only offer proof of their PCI DSS audit and report on compliance if they intend to support healthcare and mobile healthcare apps. An independent HIPAA audit and report on compliance is recommended to determine which standards are within the scope of a provider’s service.
Conversely, the rare few providers that have been initially more healthcare-focused must realize certain technology and security standards that are only best practice or highly recommended for HIPAA, are, in fact, explicitly required by PCI.
For example, two-factor authentication is an additional, enhanced security measure that a covered entity (physician or other healthcare provider) can use to ensure only authorized persons can access sensitive information. But for PCI compliance, it is specifically stated in requirement 8.3:
Incorporate two-factor authentication for remote access (network-level access originating from outside the network) to the network by employees, administrators, and third parties.
File integrity monitoring (FIM) is another security method that monitors and sends alerts when a few key file changes occur within a system, such as change of ownership, security settings or configuration values. While recommended to help protect healthcare data, it is required by PCI under the 10.5.5 sub-requirement stating,
Use file-integrity monitoring or change-detection software on logs to ensure that existing log data cannot be changed without generating alerts (although new data being added should not cause an alert).
As well as the 11.5 clause that requires:
Deploy file integrity monitoring tools to alert personnel to unauthorized modification of critical system files, configuration files or content files. Configure the software to perform critical file comparisons at least weekly.
To read the rest of the requirements and recommendations for securing health information while using a HIPAA hosting solution, read our HIPAA Compliant Data Centers white paper.
Concerned with mobile cloud security? Join our upcoming, free educational webinar on Overcoming Cloud-Based Mobility Challenges in Healthcare on July 17 @ 2PM ET.
More mobile health reading:
mHealth: Mitigating Mobile Security Risks
Keep ePHI on Secure Networks, Not Mobile Devices, Recommends OCR
Mobile Health App Regulations: FDA & HIPAA
The Rise of the Healthcare App Industry
References:
drchrono Adds Payment, Insurance Eligibility Tools to Mobile Platform
PCI DSS Requirements and Security Assessment Procedures, Version 2.0
Last week, Eric Wicklund, Editor of mHIMSS.org reported on new tools for physicians and patients to support payment processing and the ability to check insurance eligibility while using an iPad, iPhone or iPod Touch.
These tools must, by nature of their industry and function, satisfy both PCI DSS (Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard) compliance (to accept credit card payments) and HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act) compliance (to protect personally identifiable and patient health information).
The company that developed these tools is drchrono, a California-based company known initially for developing an electronic health record (EHR) system for the iPad. This new realm of mobile devices and the need for multi-compliance is an emerging trend that requires a layered security approach to meet each standard.
This particular tool works in conjunction with another company’s tool, called Square. The actual device is a card reader that, once plugged into a mobile device audio jack, allows credit card data to be collected with a mere swipe. The transaction goes directly to the physician’s or practice’s bank account, and is updated in their practice management system. Physicians can also check health insurance eligibility in real-time using the tool.
What does this mean for service providers previously supporting e-commerce and healthcare industries separately? No longer can hosting providers only offer proof of their PCI DSS audit and report on compliance if they intend to support healthcare and mobile healthcare apps. An independent HIPAA audit and report on compliance is recommended to determine which standards are within the scope of a provider’s service.
Conversely, the rare few providers that have been initially more healthcare-focused must realize certain technology and security standards that are only best practice or highly recommended for HIPAA, are, in fact, explicitly required by PCI.
For example, two-factor authentication is an additional, enhanced security measure that a covered entity (physician or other healthcare provider) can use to ensure only authorized persons can access sensitive information. But for PCI compliance, it is specifically stated in requirement 8.3:
Incorporate two-factor authentication for remote access (network-level access originating from outside the network) to the network by employees, administrators, and third parties.
File integrity monitoring (FIM) is another security method that monitors and sends alerts when a few key file changes occur within a system, such as change of ownership, security settings or configuration values. While recommended to help protect healthcare data, it is required by PCI under the 10.5.5 sub-requirement stating,
Use file-integrity monitoring or change-detection software on logs to ensure that existing log data cannot be changed without generating alerts (although new data being added should not cause an alert).
As well as the 11.5 clause that requires:
Deploy file integrity monitoring tools to alert personnel to unauthorized modification of critical system files, configuration files or content files. Configure the software to perform critical file comparisons at least weekly.
To read the rest of the requirements and recommendations for securing health information while using a HIPAA hosting solution, read our HIPAA Compliant Data Centers white paper.
Concerned with mobile cloud security? Join our upcoming, free educational webinar on Overcoming Cloud-Based Mobility Challenges in Healthcare on July 17 @ 2PM ET.
More mobile health reading:
mHealth: Mitigating Mobile Security Risks
Keep ePHI on Secure Networks, Not Mobile Devices, Recommends OCR
Mobile Health App Regulations: FDA & HIPAA
The Rise of the Healthcare App Industry
References:
drchrono Adds Payment, Insurance Eligibility Tools to Mobile Platform
PCI DSS Requirements and Security Assessment Procedures, Version 2.0