The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) recently released a proposed rule to better protect electronic health data from cybersecurity threats. The proposed rule would apply to health plans, healthcare providers, healthcare clearinghouses, and their business associates, such as billing companies, third-party administrators, and pharmacy benefit managers.

Quick Hits

The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) Security Rule has not undergone a major overhaul since 2013. However, in response to rising cybersecurity threats across the healthcare industry, on January 6, 2025, HHS published a proposed rule that would update and bolster cybersecurity protections for personal health information that’s collected by healthcare providers, hospitals, insurers, and other companies. The public has until March 7, 2025, to submit comments on the proposal.

If finalized, these changes would apply to all HIPAA-covered entities and their business associates, imposing stricter requirements around risk assessments, data encryption, multifactor authentication, and more. Importantly, the proposed rule would eliminate the distinction between “required” and “addressable” implementation specifications, making all implementation specifications required. This shift would remove much of the discretion that HIPAA-regulated entities presently have in determining whether to implement “addressable” measures, instead introducing more granular, prescriptive requirements to ensure compliance with all security standards.

The proposed rule also would require:

Next Steps

Employers and the public have until March 7, 2025, to submit comments about the proposed rule. The final rule would take effect sixty days after being published in the Federal Register. The existing HIPAA Security Rule remains in effect while the rulemaking is underway.

HIPAA-covered entities (and employers that sponsor them) may wish to review their cybersecurity practices and policies as they relate to electronic health information and evaluate gaps between existing practices and documentation and the rules as proposed. While some of the proposed changes reflect common security measures already implemented by many HIPAA-covered entities, if the proposed rule takes effect, employers can expect to incur extra costs to align their practices with those outlined by the proposed rules. This is especially true for large employers that offer self-insured health plans to their workers, since employers are generally responsible for HIPAA compliance for the self-insured health plans they sponsor.

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