Published November 30, 2025 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Addressing HIPAA concerns through strengthening data governance and risk controls in the Era of digital health and cloud transformation

  • 1. Cybersecurity Management, University of Fairfax, USA.
  • 2. Department of Health Sciences and Social Work, Western, Illinois University, Macomb, Illinois, USA.

Description

The rapid expansion of digital health technologies, cloud-based data infrastructures, and remote care delivery models has reshaped how healthcare organizations create, store, and exchange protected health information (PHI). While these advances improve care coordination, analytics, and patient engagement, they also introduce heightened privacy, security, and compliance risks under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA). Traditional perimeter-based security models are increasingly insufficient, as PHI now flows across distributed networks, third-party platforms, telehealth applications, and mobile devices. As a result, healthcare providers face challenges in ensuring data confidentiality, integrity, and controlled access while balancing operational efficiency and clinical innovation. Strengthening data governance frameworks is essential to addressing these challenges. Robust governance ensures that data ownership, stewardship, access privileges, and accountability structures are clearly defined and enforced. This includes implementing role-based access controls, comprehensive audit logging, data lifecycle management, and continuous compliance monitoring. Additionally, maturing risk management practices such as proactive threat modeling, security posture assessments, vendor risk evaluations, and real-time anomaly detection helps mitigate breach exposure and regulatory non-compliance. Cloud transformation demands a shift toward shared-responsibility security models, encryption-by-default architectures, and zero-trust identity management. The integration of privacy-enhancing technologies, such as tokenization, de-identification, and federated analytics, can further reduce PHI exposure while maintaining analytical value. Finally, building a culture of security awareness through workforce training and governance oversight strengthens organizational resilience. By aligning HIPAA compliance efforts with modern data governance and risk control strategies, healthcare organizations can protect patient trust, support digital innovation, and ensure ethical, secure, and sustainable health information ecosystems.

Files

WJARR-2025-3778.pdf

Files (647.0 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:236088ccb9d51714c3049689dd2ee691
647.0 kB Preview Download

Additional details