> To be fair of the things you've described, if you can swing it, you should be doing most of this regardless for a business setup
Not sure how to respond to this. Are you saying I should go out and hire 2-3 people to set up a ton of infrastructure and maintain it for me instead of relying on the professionals at Azure (who specialize in this) and it's done automatically at a fraction of the cost? We went through 5 years of "bitcoin for your data" fraud in exactly the situation your describing.
I don't need to hire anybody as of now. None.
> I'm going through a gap analysis for HIPAA now; would you mind sharing what impactful changing regulations you've seen in the past 5 years?
This is my point. I don't know and don't care. I don't have to worry about it at all. I don't have to worry about updating the handful of apps and servers that connect to all the different integrations we use because this field is siloed into a 1,000,000 little pieces. I don't have to worry about PHI getting leaked out of some server I forgot to update somewhere or misconfigured because I made a mistake while installing it or setting it up the first time. That stuff is all handled through Azure's existing cloud infrastructure. It's literally tailored to healthcare solutions. No single person (or 2 or 3 or even 4) full time people could come close to what they offer at the cost.
I don't think I was communicating my first point effectively; I didn't mean to reference you personally or to the approach taken (VPS or cloud). If there is a business who needs HIPAA, then most likely, the business should be doing all of those original points because doing them is better (more effective, better security, etc.) than not doing them. I'm trying to say than extending to HIPAA could potentially be 'simple' if there is a business already doing most of this.
I understand that you're using Azure's existing infrastructure to handle your logistical technical management, but I was here asking if you had to make any changes to keep abreast of changing regulations. There seems to be practical business decisions that need to be made that HIPAA impacts, such as what data constitutes PHI (has that changed? Maybe you had to go back and change what data you were keeping because of the above regulation changes- I don't know if that could be the case, that's why I'm asking, I'm not aware of what I don't know). If Azure is somehow keeping track of all "changing regulations" for you (including business needs) and you've never had to worry about it, that's good to know. I would still be interested in any specific details if you're aware of it.
> but I was here asking if you had to make any changes to keep abreast of changing regulations.
No, we haven't. Not yet.
> If Azure is somehow keeping track of all "changing regulations" for you (including business needs) and you've never had to worry about it, that's good to know. I would still be interested in any specific details if you're aware of it.
You do bring up a good point and I shouldn't have implied otherwise that it can handle everything for you. So yes, there is a ton of other stuff that isn't magically handled by you such as identifying PHI and stuff. That being said, they have a whole suite of analytical and machine learning tools that will help you do this.
BUT, they do have this healthcare platform they're building like this stuff https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dynamics365/industry/healt... that I would imagine would provide a bit more coverage on those types of changes than something you're building yourself.
No problem at all. It's such a fascinating and cool field to build software in.
Someone else above had mentioned the complexity of medical coding and I don't know what you do or what you're working on but that's another really interesting part of the puzzle. And starts to get into why it's so hard for one system to communicate with each other in healthcare.
Not sure how to respond to this. Are you saying I should go out and hire 2-3 people to set up a ton of infrastructure and maintain it for me instead of relying on the professionals at Azure (who specialize in this) and it's done automatically at a fraction of the cost? We went through 5 years of "bitcoin for your data" fraud in exactly the situation your describing.
I don't need to hire anybody as of now. None.
> I'm going through a gap analysis for HIPAA now; would you mind sharing what impactful changing regulations you've seen in the past 5 years?
This is my point. I don't know and don't care. I don't have to worry about it at all. I don't have to worry about updating the handful of apps and servers that connect to all the different integrations we use because this field is siloed into a 1,000,000 little pieces. I don't have to worry about PHI getting leaked out of some server I forgot to update somewhere or misconfigured because I made a mistake while installing it or setting it up the first time. That stuff is all handled through Azure's existing cloud infrastructure. It's literally tailored to healthcare solutions. No single person (or 2 or 3 or even 4) full time people could come close to what they offer at the cost.