LuxSci

Know the Requirements for Sending HIPAA-Compliant Emails

Risks of not sending HIPAA-compliant email

Sending HIPAA-compliant emails continues be a core requirement for effective healthcare engagement, including for care management, patient and customer communications, and preventative care, as well as for marketing and data collection efforts. At the same time, patient and customer protected health information (PHI) can never be compromised, making it critical to understand the risks and requirements for sending HIPAA-compliant emails.

The Risks of Non-Compliance

  1. Data Breaches: Failing to send HIPAA-compliant emails can lead to data breaches. When patient information is sent through unsecured channels, it becomes vulnerable to unauthorized access. This not only jeopardizes patient and customer privacy but also opens up the possibility of identity theft and fraud. Personal medical details falling into the wrong hands is a nightmare scenario that can easily be avoided with proper email security measures.
  2. Hefty Fines and Legal Action: Failing to adhere to HIPAA regulations can result in significant fines and legal action. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Office for Civil Rights (OCR) is vigilant in enforcing HIPAA rules, and violations can lead to penalties ranging from thousands to millions of dollars, depending on the severity and negligence involved. For any healthcare organization or associated business, these financial penalties can be devastating.
  3. Loss of Trust: The loss of trust from patients and customers can be an irreversible blow to your reputation. In a field where confidentiality is a requirement, mishandling sensitive information can lead to a breakdown in patient-provider relationships, harming your organization’s credibility and future business.
  4. Operational Disruptions: Data breaches and compliance issues can lead to operational disruptions. Addressing a breach requires time, resources, and often halts regular operations, affecting the quality of care provided to patients, customer experiences, and overall business efficiency.
  5. Criminal Charges: In severe cases, non-compliance with HIPAA regulations can result in criminal charges against the individuals responsible for the breach. This could include imprisonment and other serious legal consequences.

Tips for Sending HIPAA-Compliant Emails

  1. Use Encrypted Email Services: Ensure that all email communications involving patient information are encrypted. Encryption converts the data into a code to prevent unauthorized access, making it a crucial tool for securing protected health information.
  2. Implement Access Controls: Limit access to sensitive information to only those employees who need it to perform their job duties. This minimizes the risk of unauthorized access and potential breaches.
  3. Regular Training: Conduct regular training sessions for your staff on HIPAA compliance and the importance of securing patient and customer information. Keeping everyone informed about the latest practices and threats is key to maintaining a secure environment.
  4. Audit and Monitor: Regularly audit and monitor email communications and data access. This helps identify and address any vulnerabilities or suspicious activities promptly.
  5. Use HIPAA Compliant Email Solutions: Invest in email solutions specifically designed to meet HIPAA standards. These solutions often come with built-in security features such as automated encryption, access controls, and audit trails.

How to Evaluate HIPAA-Compliant Email Solutions

  1. End-to-End Encryption: Best-in-class solutions offer end-to-end encryption to protect data in transit and at rest, using a dedicated cloud infrastructure for maximum security.
  2. Automated encryption: Make sure solutions can automatically encrypt every email sent versus requiring user intervention to ensure security and HIPAA compliance.
  3. Access Controls: Look for solutions that provide strong access controls, including multi-factor authentication, to ensure only authorized personnel can access sensitive information.
  4. Audit Trails: Maintaining detailed audit trails is a must-have to track who accessed information and when. This is crucial for compliance and identifying potential breaches.
  5. Regular Updates and Support: Work with vendors that provide regular updates and strong customer support to address issues promptly, and to stay up to speed and compliant with the latest regulations.

How do you rate your HIPAA compliant communications efforts?

Take the LuxSci HIPAA Compliance Communications Health Check to find out – it’s 5 minute survey that gets you a personalized report on how your organization can benefit from the latest innovations and capabilities for secure healthcare communications. Take the assessment here.

Ensuring your emails are HIPAA compliant is not just about avoiding fines; it’s about safeguarding patient and customer privacy, maintaining their trust, and expanding your business with better healthcare engagement. By uusing secure healthcare communication services and adhering to HIPAA guidelines, you can protect sensitive information, improve the healthcare journey, and deliver better outcomes for your patients – and for your business.

Get in touch

Find The Best Solution For Your Organization

Talk To An Expert & Get A Quote

A member of our staff will reach out to you

Get Your Free E-Book!

Discover E-Book & gain expert insights.

What you’ll learn:

Enter your email to download now!

We respect your privacy. No spam, ever.

Related Posts

What is a cyber risk assessment?

What Is a Cyber Risk Assessment?

As cyber threats become both more frequent and sophisticated, it’s essential for healthcare companies to strengthen their cybersecurity posture and safeguard the electronic protected health information (ePHI) within their IT ecosystems and communications. This begins with a comprehensive cyber risk assessment that spans infrastructure, applications and communications. 

A cyber risk assessment enables healthcare companies to focus their attention on the IT areas that need the most improvement, allowing them to be more effective in their threat mitigation efforts. This not only reduces the chances of cyber attacks but helps them align with HIPAA’s guidelines and maintain the operational integrity required to best serve their patients and customers.

Let’s discuss why it’s vital that healthcare companies conduct thorough cyber threat risk assessments and the steps your organization can take to carry one out effectively.

Why Are Cyber Risk Assessments Crucial for Healthcare Organizations?

In an increasingly digitized healthcare landscape, conducting regular risk assessments is essential for companies of all sizes, in every industry. For healthcare companies, charged with protecting patient data, it’s especially critical and often a compliance requirement. Electronic PHI, which contains details of an individual’s health history, including current conditions, past illnesses and procedures, prescribed medicine, etc., is very sensitive in nature, so healthcare companies must go the extra mile to ensure its protection in transit and at rest. 

Performing a cyber threat risk assessment is the first step to achieving this critical requirement. A risk assessment allows you to identify all of the ePHI within your business, understand the threats it faces, determine gaps in your cybersecurity posture, and, most importantly, mitigate them.  

Additionally, from a compliance perspective, conducting regular risk assessments is a key requirement of HIPAA’s Security Rule. Consequently, healthcare companies must carry out periodic risk assessments if they want to comply with HIPAA regulations, and avoid the consequences of non-compliance. A risk assessment provides documented evidence, to auditors, supply-chain partners, and others, that you are conscious of security concerns and have taken the proper steps to mitigate them. 

How Do You Conduct A Cyber Risk Assessment? 

Now that we’ve discussed their importance, let’s turn our attention to how healthcare organizations can conduct effective cyber risk assessments. 

Identify Assets

The first, and, arguably, most important step of a risk assessment is identifying your organization’s digital assets, which include: 

  • Hardware: endpoint devices (desktops, laptops, smartphones, etc.), servers, network equipment, medical equipment, etc. 
  • Systems, infrastructure and applications: operating systems, cloud services, etc. 
  • Data, i.e., ePHI

Now, the reason asset identification could be considered the most crucial part of a risk assessment is that a healthcare organization‘s security teams can’t protect what they aren’t aware of! 

Consequently, weeding out instances of “shadow IT”, i.e., the use of applications and/or systems without the approval of a company’s IT department is essential. Otherwise, you could have cases in which ePHI is used in applications, resides on databases, and so on – without it being adequately safeguarded. 

Once you’ve identified your assets, you need to classify them: based on their sensitivity and potential impact if a security incident were to occur.

Identify Vulnerabilities and Threats

Having successfully catalogued your assets, you must now establish the factors most likely to compromise their security. This first means pinpointing the vulnerabilities in your IT ecosystem, which could include:

  • A lack of encryption, or weak standards
  • Lax access controls
  • Weak password policies 
  • Lack of monitoring and logging 
  • Outdated software (with some no longer being supported by its vendor) 
  • End-of-life hardware
  • Infrequent back-ups
  • Unverified or insecure third-party vendors

When you have a better understanding of these vulnerabilities, which are called attack vectors, you can then determine the most likely threats to ePHI based on the gaps in your security posture. These include:

  • Data breaches or exposure
  • Malware, e.g., ransomware, viruses, spyware, etc. 
  • Social engineering phishing
  • Insider threats (whether through malice or human error)
  • Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks

Fortunately, there is an array of scanning tools that will help you find your cybersecurity vulnerabilities. As far as understanding the main threats to your sensitive patient and customer data, you need to keep up with the latest in threat intelligence. Cybercriminals are always devising new ways to infiltrate healthcare organizations’ networks, so your security teams must remain aware of emerging cyber threats. 

Risk Prioritization

So, now you have catalogued your assets, determined their vulnerabilities, and identified the threats. However, implementing cyber threat mitigation measures requires resources – namely time and money – so you must prioritize which risks to mitigate first, based on their likelihood and impact.

First, how likely is a threat to exploit a vulnerability? Healthcare organizations typically determine this through existing threat databases, such as MITRE, as well as keeping up-to-date on the latest threat intelligence and determining how it pertains to your company. 

Secondly, evaluate the potential impact, or consequences, of a threat actually manifesting, i.e., a an email breach or a malicious actor successfully pulling off a cyber attack and infiltrating your network. When analyzing the potential impact, consider the financial, operational, reputational, and compliance implications. 

Report Findings

At this point, you should report the findings of the risk assessments to your company’s key stakeholders, e.g., upper management, compliance officers, IT management and security, etc. This ensures that decision-makers understand the nature of the top threats facing your organization, their potential business impact, and the urgency of implementing mitigation controls. 

This also helps security teams secure the resources they need to bolster their cybersecurity posture accordingly. An additional benefit of this reporting is that it provides an audit trail for compliance efforts, as it demonstrates your efforts to better protect patient and customer data. 

Implement Mitigation Measures

Now, we’ve come to the point in the risk assessment process where you act on your due diligence and implement the policies and controls that will better protect patient data and comply with HIPAA guidelines.  

Mitigation measures broadly fall into three categories: 

  • Preventive: e.g., encryption, access control, user authentication (e.g., multi-factor authentication (MFA))
  • Detective: e.g., vulnerability scanning, continuous monitoring
  • Corrective: e.g., incident response, backups and disaster recovery

A robust cybersecurity posture requires a combination of all three. Your risk assessment may reveal that your organization is strong in one aspect but less so in others, or you may need to bolster your efforts across the board. 

Document Your Risk Mitigation Measures

Create a risk mitigation implementation report that details how your organization executed its cyber threat mitigation strategies. This should include: 

  • Affected assets: the parts of your IT infrastructure (servers, databases, etc.) and applications you identified as vulnerable and the severity of their corresponding threats. 
  • Mitigation actions: the specific action(s) undertaken to mitigate cyber threats against the asset, e.g., enhancing encryption standards, strengthening password policies, conducting cyber threat awareness training, etc. 
  • Technical details: where applicable, such as a particular update applied to an application, how a system has been configured, which new software solution has been deployed, and so on.
  • Post-mitigation risk assessment: re-evaluate the risk level of each asset after the implementation of new security measures. 
  • Monitoring and compliance: detail how the organization will monitor the efficacy of the implemented measures, as well as how your enhanced controls and policies align with compliance standards (e.g., HIPAA, NIST, HITRUST, etc).

As with the report for stakeholders after the initial stages of the assessment, the risk mitigation implementation report also leaves a compliance audit trail, which will become all the more important when the proposed changes to the HIPAA Security Rule come into effect.

Continuous Monitoring and Review

As detailed in your risk mitigation implementation report, you must continuously monitor your IT infrastructure to assess the effectiveness of your newly implemented policies and controls. This process also mitigates cyber risk, in and of itself, as it provides fewer opportunities for malicious actors to breach your network: you’ll have systems in place to alert you of suspicious activity. 

Additionally, you must regularly reassess your organization’s cyber risks as new threats emerge, your IT ecosystem evolves, or if you succumb to a cyber attack. 

How Often Should You Conduct Cyber Risk Assessments? 

Healthcare organizations should carry out a cyber risk assessment at least once a year, with respect to time, or when they make changes to their IT infrastructure. With the proposed changes to the HIPAA Security Rule on the horizon, now is an opportune time to conduct a risk assessment and measure your cyber threat readiness against the new stipulations of the soon-to-be-updated Security Rule.

Also, as alluded to above, if you suffer a security incident, you must conduct a post-breach assessment, once the threat is contained, to establish how a malicious actor breached your network – and how to prevent it from happening again. 

How LuxSci Helps Mitigate Cyber Risk in the Healthcare Industry

With more than 20 years of experience, LuxSci has developed the required expertise to make secure communication solutions tailored to meet the stringent cyber risk mitigation needs of the healthcare industry.

LuxSci’s suite of HIPAA-compliant communication solutions includes:

  • Secure Email: HIPAA-compliant email solutions for executing highly scalable, high volume email campaigns that include PHI – millions of emails per month.
  • Secure Forms: Securely and efficiently collect and store ePHI without compromising security or compliance – for onboarding new patients and customers and gathering intelligence for personalization.
  • Secure Marketing: proactively reach your patients and customers with HIPAA compliant email marketing campaigns for increased engagement, lead generation and sales.
  • Secure Text Messaging: enable access to ePHI and other sensitive information directly to mobile devices via regular SMS text messages.

Interested in discovering more about how LuxSci can help you protect your patient’s ePHI, mitigate cyber risk, and ensure HIPAA compliance for your email and communications? Contact us today!

HIPAA Compliant Email

What Are the Implications of the Proposed Changes to the HIPAA Security Rule?

With the recent announcement of proposed changes to the HIPAA Security Rule, by the Office for Civil Rights (OCR), healthcare providers, payers, suppliers, and organizations of all sizes will have to tighten up their cybersecurity practices. In some cases, considerably. 

However, with the announcement being so recent (and there not even yet being a clear timeline for when companies will have to implement the changes), it’s all too easy for organizations to view the proposed amendments as a challenge that’s far off in the future.

However, even at this early stage, the proposed changes to the Security Rule require careful consideration and important conversations. Soon, healthcare companies will have to implement or improve a series of cybersecurity controls designed to better safeguard electronic protected health information (ePHI). 

In light of this, in this post, we’ll discuss some of the most important practical considerations that healthcare organizations will have to contend with to maintain HIPAA compliance when the proposed changes to the Security Rule go through. 

What are the Key Proposed Changes to the HIPAA Security Rule?

First, a refresher on what the proposed changes to the Security Rule are:

  1. More Comprehensive Risk Management: healthcare organizations must conduct more frequent risk assessments to identify, categorize, and mitigate threats to sensitive patient data. 
  2. Stricter Documentation and Evidence Retention Policies: similarly, stronger documentation and record-keeping practices to ensure organizations can demonstrate compliance with security requirements.

    This includes:
  • Maintaining detailed records of how they assess threats and implement safeguard security controls (e.g., encryption policies, access controls, etc).
  • Retaining detailed audit logs of system access, data modifications, and security events, as well as reports from security solutions, such as firewalls and intrusion detection systems all must be securely stored, retained for a defined period, and made available for audits and compliance reviews.
  • By the same token, the proposed updates to the Security Rule may extend how long healthcare organizations must retain logs and other security documentation, allowing auditors to review historical compliance efforts in the event of an investigation.
  1. Mandatory Encryption for All ePHI Transmission: healthcare companies will require end-to-end encryption for emails, messages, and data transfers involving ePHI. Like today, this means that patient data must be encrypted in transit, i.e., from one place to another (when collected in a secure form, sent in an email, etc.), and in storage, i.e., where it will reside.
  2. Stronger User Authentication and Identity Verification Requirements: healthcare providers must implement stronger identity access management IAM safeguards, such as Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA), for employees with access to patient data.
  3. Tighter Third-Party Security Controls: stricter security controls for business associates who have access to the healthcare company’s ePHI. One of the proposed changes to the HIPAA Security Rule is that vendor security audits will be mandatory instead of optional.
  4. Updated Incident Response (IR) and Data Breach Reporting Rules: mandating stricter breach notification timelines for healthcare entities and their business associates, with them being obligated to inform parties affected by a security breach as soon as possible. 

What Are The Practical Implications for Healthcare Companies?

So, what will healthcare companies have to do to comply with HIPAA regulations when the proposed changes to the Security Rule go through? Let’s look at the main practical considerations.

Cybersecurity Solution Deployment and Infrastructure Upgrades 

Many healthcare companies will have to install (and subsequently, maintain) new IT infrastructure and deploy new cybersecurity tools to strengthen their authentication safeguards (e.g., MFA, Zero Trust, etc.) to meet new HIPAA’s heightened cybersecurity standards.

Expanded Vendor and Third-Party Management

As well as having to deploy new cybersecurity solutions, such as HIPAA compliant email services and continuous monitoring tools, healthcare organizations will have to be more diligent in their oversight of their third-party vendors.  

Stricter Auditing and Documentation Requirements

In having to provide more details of their risk management practices and maintain real-time logs, healthcare organizations will have to develop processes, policies, and supporting documentation. 

Staff Training 

Healthcare companies will have to train their staff on the updates of the Security Rule, their implications, how to use the new applications and hardware deployed to harden their security posture, etc. 

Increased Management and Administrative Burden 

Dealing with proposed changes to the Security Rule is going to require all hands on deck. 

Managers and stakeholders are going to make several important strategic decisions; procurement and product managers are going to have to research and purchase new solutions; IT will have to deploy the solutions; and everyone will need to learn how to use them. 

With all this in mind, more will be required from everyone within your organization. Employees will be taken away from their work, which could affect the quality of the service provided to patients and customers. 

That’s why it’s crucial to be prepared…

How Can You Prepare For the Proposed Changes to the Security Rule?

  • Conduct risk assessments: pinpoint vulnerabilities within your IT network and the ePHI contained therein. You should conduct risk assessments annually at the very least – or you upgrade your IT infrastructure. In light of the proposed amendments to the Security Rule, conducting a risk assessment to identify the security gaps in your network against the proposed rule changes is essential.
  • Evaluate your existing email and communication platforms: to accommodate the upcoming changes to the Security Rule, many healthcare companies will need to upgrade to HIPAA compliant email communication solutions, as well as encrypted databases for securely storing ePHI at rest. Deploying an email services solution designed for the healthcare industry, like LuxSci, best ensures compliance with encryption and the other new requirements of the Security Rule.
  • Improve your organization’s incident response planning and documentation processes: develop all the required documentation to track the movement of patient data, and refine your processes for handling security events. This also encompasses training your staff on your new security policies and procedures.
  • Improve your organization’s cybersecurity posture: by implementing end-to-end encryption, network segmentation, zero-trust security infrastructure, data loss protection (DLP) protocols, and other measures that will better protect patient data.
  • Perform vendor due diligence: ensure your third-party service providers meet HIPAA compliance standards and that you have a Business Associate Agreement (BAA) in place with each vendor that can access your ePHI. 

How Luxsci Can Help You Navigate the Proposed Changes to the HIPAA Security Rule

With more than 20 years of experience in delivering best-in-class secure healthcare communication solutions, LuxSci is a trusted partner for healthcare organizations looking to secure their email and digital communications in line with regulatory standards and the industry’s highest security standards.

LuxSci’s suite of HIPAA-compliant solutions includes:

  • Secure Email: HIPAA-compliant email solutions executing highly scalable email campaigns that include PHI – send millions of emails per month.
  • Secure Forms: Securely and efficiently collect and store ePHI without compromising security or compliance – for onboarding new patients and customers and gathering intelligence for personalization.
  • Secure Marketing – proactively reach your patients and customers with HIPAA compliant email marketing campaigns for increased engagement, lead generation and sales.
  • Secure Text Messaging – enable access to ePHI and other sensitive information directly to mobile devices via regular SMS text messages. 

Interested in discovering more about LuxSci can help you get a head start on upgrading your cybersecurity stance to ensure future HIPAA compliance? Contact us today!

healthcare marketing

What is a SMART Objective in Healthcare Marketing?

Healthcare marketing objectives typically follow the SMART framework: Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, and Time-bound goals that guide marketing campaigns and patient outreach programs. These structured objectives help healthcare organizations track progress, measure success, and adapt strategies to meet defined targets within budget and regulatory requirements. Clear, well-defined objectives lead to effective resource allocation and higher returns on marketing investments. As a result, marketing teams use this framework to develop campaigns that deliver quantifiable results while maintaining healthcare industry standards and compliance requirements.

SMART Marketing Requirements

The SMART framework provides healthcare organizations with a structured method to develop marketing plans that deliver measurable results. Marketing teams design objectives that meet specific criteria for success, including detailed action plans and performance metrics. Each objective links to broader organizational goals while maintaining healthcare compliance standards. Teams consider market conditions, resource availability, and patient needs when setting these objectives. The framework ensures marketing plans remain focused on achievable outcomes rather than vague aspirations. To track results, organizations review their healthcare marketing objectives quarterly to validate alignment with business goals and adjust targets based on market changes. Marketing teams document their objectives in detail, including baseline metrics, target improvements, and measurement methods to track progress accurately.

  • SMART objectives help healthcare marketers directly connect marketing activities to measurable patient acquisition outcomes.
  • Cross-departmental collaboration improves when marketing and relevant teams set out clearly defined objectives.
  • Healthcare organizations using structured objectives can better demonstrate marketing value to leadership and stakeholders.
  • Well-documented SMART objectives create marketing accountability while supporting compliance with healthcare regulations.
  • The framework encourages more efficient resource allocation by requiring measurable outcomes for all marketing investments.

Target Markets and Patient Segments

Marketing teams use demographic data and healthcare utilization patterns to identify target patient populations. They analyze factors like age groups, insurance coverage, medical needs, and geographic location to create focused marketing objectives. This research shapes campaign messaging and channel selection for different patient segments. Teams track response rates across various demographics to refine their targeting strategies. Market segmentation helps organizations allocate marketing resources to the most promising patient groups and service lines. Research includes analyzing patient data from electronic health records, insurance claims, and market surveys to understand healthcare needs and preferences. Teams develop patient personas to guide marketing efforts and create relevant messaging for each segment. They study healthcare consumption patterns, referral sources, and patient journey maps to identify marketing opportunities within each segment.

Budget Planning and Resource Management

Healthcare marketing objectives should include detailed budget planning and resource allocation strategies. This means that teams develop cost projections for different marketing channels and campaign types. They track spending against expected patient acquisition costs and revenue generation. These financial objectives help organizations maintain profitable marketing operations while meeting growth targets. Budget planning includes staff time, technology costs, advertising and lead generation expenses, and marketing content production. Regular financial reviews ensure marketing activities stay within planned spending limits while delivering expected results. Marketing departments calculate return on investment for each campaign type and channel to optimize resource allocation. They maintain detailed cost tracking systems to monitor expenses across all marketing activities. Teams develop contingency plans for budget adjustments based on campaign performance and market changes.

Technology Integration and Digital Marketing

Marketing objectives dictate technology requirements for campaign execution and performance tracking. Teams set goals for website optimization, email deliverability and conversions, social media engagement, and digital ad campaign results. They also plan implementation schedules for new marketing technologies and patient communication tools. These objectives include metrics for online appointment scheduling, patient portal usage, email engagement, and digital content engagement. Organizations track technology adoption rates and return on digital marketing investments. Marketing teams continuously evaluate new healthcare marketing technologies and platforms to improve campaign effectiveness. For example, email marketing platforms that securely transmit protected health information (PHI) can enable greater personalization with more targeted and customized messages. Integration plans are developed for marketing automation tools, email marketing and campaign tools, customer relationship management systems, and analytics platforms. The technical requirements include the necessary data security measures, such as end-to-end encryption, to protect patient information and maintain HIPAA compliance across all digital marketing channels.

Marketing departments can also create automation objectives to nurture leads and improve operational efficiency. Email communication campaigns are created with targeted messages based on patient attributes, health conditions, interests and product needs. Marketing teams must establish protocols for using PHI to personalize patient outreach while maintaining compliance standards. Marketing automation tools help track patient interactions across multiple touchpoints and trigger appropriate follow-up communications. Organizations measure email engagement rates, deliverability, and conversion metrics to evaluate effectiveness. Their teams develop workflow automation systems that reduce manual tasks and improve campaign conversions and ongoing engagement. These automated processes help marketing departments manage larger email volumes while maintaining personalized patient and customer communications.

Campaign Execution and Timeline Management

Healthcare marketing teams create detailed implementation schedules for their objectives. They set specific dates for campaign launches, content creation, and performance reviews. Marketing calendars account for seasonal healthcare needs, annual testing, procedures and plan enrollments, and organizational updates. Teams coordinate marketing activities with other departments, including clinical departments, customer experience teams, operations, IT infrastructure and security, and administrative staff. Project management tools help track progress toward marketing objectives and maintain accountability. Regular timeline reviews allow teams to adjust schedules based on results and changing priorities. Campaign execution plans should also include content development schedules, media placement timelines, and coordination with external marketing vendors. The teams create workflow systems to manage multiple campaigns across different channels and patient segments, and an approval processes is established for marketing campaigns and materials to ensure compliance with healthcare regulations and brand standards.

Performance Analysis and Strategy Refinement

Successful healthcare marketing teams establish systems to measure marketing objective achievements, with their teams tracking key performance indicators through analytics platforms and robust reporting tools. They analyze patient acquisition data, lead generation and conversions, opportunities and revenue growth. This information helps marketing departments identify successful strategies and areas for improvement. Performance analysis includes comparing results against industry benchmarks and competitor performance, as well as their own historical performance. Regular strategy reviews ensure marketing objectives remain aligned with organizational goals and market conditions. Marketing teams should create monthly performance reports, tracking progress toward SMART objectives. The teams should also conduct quarterly reviews of marketing strategies to assess effectiveness and make necessary adjustments. Analysis includes patient satisfaction and engagement metrics, service and product line revenue growth rates, and marketing campaign response rates. Teams use this data to refine future marketing objectives and improve campaign performance.

LuxSci Third Party Integrations

The Risks of Third-Party Email Integrations for Healthcare Companies

Today’s healthcare organizations heavily rely on a variety of third-party organizations for a range of services and products. This includes applications (i.e., SaaS solutions), suppliers, partners, and other companies depended upon to serve their patients and customers. 

As the healthcare industry evolves, companies will need to increasingly collaborate with external parties, or business associates, which creates several dependencies and risks. 

In particular, third-party email platforms are integral to the operations of healthcare companies, and the sensitive nature of protected health information (PHI) contained in email communications raises the stakes exponentially. 

This post analyzes the main risks associated with third-party email integrations. From there, we detail the most effective measures for safeguarding your company from the dangers of an insecure integration with an email delivery platform.

What Are The Risks of Third-Party Email Integrations?

Email applications are a pillar of the modern workplace, enabling companies to communicate almost instantly and facilitating greater productivity and efficiency. Email has transformed the speed at which transactions can take place and individuals receive the product or service they’ve purchased. 

Consequently, the importance of email communication and the vast amounts of sensitive data it encompasses, makes it a contrast target – or “attack vector” for cybercriminals. Hackers and other malicious actors know that if they can infiltrate an organization’s email system, they have the potential to steal vast amounts of private or proprietary data. Just as alarmingly, they may simply use an insecure email platform as a backdoor into a company’s wider network, assuming greater control over their systems in an effort to maximize their financial gain or inflict maximum damage to an organization.

For healthcare companies with ambitious patient engagement goals, sharing protected health information (PHI) with a reliable third-party email provider is mandatory. Unfortunately, this comes with a litany of risks, which include:

  1. Data Breaches: weak security features in third-party email providers can expose PHI. 
  2. Misconfigured Permissions: misconfigurations and a lack of oversight control can result in personnel at third parties having excessive access to PHI.
  3. HIPAA Non-Compliance – if the integration does not support encryption, audit logs and other features mandated by HIPAA, you may drift into non-compliant territory.
  4. Financial Implications: violating HIPAA regulations can result in financial penalties, including fines and compensation to affected parties. 
  5. Reputational Damage: companies that fall victim to cyber attacks, especially through negligence, become cautionary tales and case studies for cybersecurity solution vendors. Data exposure that comes from an insecure email platform integration can have disastrous effects on your company’s reputation. 

Therefore, mitigating the risks of integrating a third-party email platform into your IT infrastructure, platforms and systems is crucial. This includes customer data platforms (CDP), electronic health record systems (EHR) and revenue cycle management platforms (RCM). Let’s move on to specific strategies on how to do so and, subsequently, better safeguard your organization’s PHI. 

How To Mitigate Email Integration Risk

Now that you have a better understanding of the potential risks that come with integrating an insecure third-party email solution into your IT ecosystem, let’s look at risk prevention. Fortunately, several strategies will significantly lower the risk of malicious actors getting their hands on the sensitive patient data under your care. Let’s take a look:

Verify A Third-Party Vendor’s Security Practices

Before sharing PHI with a vendor, ensure they have a strong cybersecurity posture. This makes sure they have measures such as encryption, access control (or identity access management (IAM), and continuous monitoring solutions in place, in addition to conducting regular risk assessments. 

Similarly, it’s crucial to research an email provider’s reputation, including how long they’ve been in operation, the companies they count among their clients, and their overall standing within the industry. 

Business Associate Agreements (BAAs)

A business associate agreement (BAA) is a legal document that’s required for HIPAA compliance, when sharing PHI with third-party vendors, such as email services. It ensures that both you and the vendor formally agree to comply with HIPAA regulations and your respective responsibilities in protecting patient data. 

Without a BAA, the above point about verifying a vendor’s security practices is moot. If they’re not willing to sign a BAA, their security stance is irrelevant, as your organization would have violated HIPAA regulations by not signing a BAA. More to the point, a HIPAA compliant email vendor will be eager to highlight their willingness to sign a BAA, as it advertises their ability to safeguard PHI and aid companies in achieving compliance. 

Encrypting PHI

Encryption needs to be a major consideration when it comes to integrating a third-party email services provider. Adequate encryption measures ensure that sensitive data is protected even in the event of its exfiltration or interception. Sure, the hackers now have hold of the PHI, but with proper encryption policies and controls, it will be unreadable, preserving the privacy of the individuals affected by the data leak. 

With this in mind, encryption measures that mitigate third-party email integrations include automated encryption, which ensures PHI is always encrypted without the need for manual configuration, and flexible encryption, which matches the encryption level with the security standards of your recipients. 

Threat Intelligence

Unfortunately, cybersecurity never stands still. With the ever-evolving nature of cyber threats, healthcare organizations must keep up with the latest dangers to patient data. This means creating a process for discovering, and acting upon, the latest threat intelligence.

This could entail signing up for a threat intelligence service, or retaining the periodic services of an external threat intelligence expert. 

Developing An Incident Response Plan For Vendor-Related Breaches

The alarming reality of securing PHI is that, even with robust safeguards in place, such as continuous monitoring, a process for acquiring the latest threat intelligence, and generally following the advice outlined in this post, data breaches are still a stark reality. Cyber criminals will always target healthcare organizations, due to the value and sensitivity of their data and systems. Worse, even as security measures grow more effective, the tools that malicious actors have at their disposal become more sophisticated. It’s an arms race, and one that’s only been exacerbated by the introduction of AI, with both security professionals and cyber criminals honing their use of it for their respective purposes.

Taking all this into consideration, having a comprehensive incident response plan in place ensures your organization responds quickly and effectively to cyber threats, or even suspicious activity. Your incident response plan should:

  • Detail what employees should do if they suspect malicious activity.
  • Outline steps for investigation and containment.
  • When and how to notify affected parties.
  • Processes for disaster recovery and retaining operational continuity.

While it’s vital to develop a general incident response plan, having a specific set of protocols for security breaches caused by third-party vendors is especially prudent.

Choose a HIPAA-Compliant Email Provider

An efficient and convenient way of mitigating the risks of third-party email integrations is to deploy a HIPAA compliant email delivery platform for communicating with patients and customers. 

Being well-versed with the safety requirements of healthcare organizations, HIPAA compliant email software features all the security required to safeguard PHI. In deploying a HIPAA compliant email provider, you also implement several of the strategies outlined above, such as encryption and signing a BAA (as a HIPAA compliant will offer a BAA). Accounting for this, taking the time to select the right HIPAA compliant email provider for your organization’s needs and goals should be a key part of your overall cyber threat defense strategy. 

Train Staff on Secure Email Communication Practices

Your staff is a considerable part of securing third-party email communications, so they must know the best practices for email security and safeguarding PHI. Comprehensive cyber threat awareness training ensures your personnel understand the risks of HIPAA non-compliance and follow the procedures you’ve set in place. Furthermore, the more responsibility an employee has in regards to PHI, the more comprehensive and regular their training needs to be.  

Additionally, training, or “drilling”, if you will, on their roles in the incident response process increases its efficacy considerably and optimizes your response to attempts at unauthorized access to data. 

How LuxSci Mitigates the Risks of Third-Party Integrations

At LuxSci, we specialize in providing secure, HIPAA compliant solutions that enable healthcare organizations to execute effective email communications and marketing campaigns.  

With more than 20 years of experience, and helping close to 2000 healthcare organizations with HIPAA compliant email services, LuxSci has developed powerful, proven tools that sidestep the vulnerabilities often associated with third-party email integration. To learn more about how LuxSci can help your organization address the risks of third-party email integration, contact us today.

You Might Also Like

What is a cyber risk assessment?

What Is a Cyber Risk Assessment?

HIPAA Compliant Email

What Are the Implications of the Proposed Changes to the HIPAA Security Rule?

healthcare marketing

What is a SMART Objective in Healthcare Marketing?

LuxSci Third Party Integrations

The Risks of Third-Party Email Integrations for Healthcare Companies

LuxSci Make Gmail HIPAA Compliant

How to Make Gmail HIPAA-Compliant

For healthcare providers and organizations required to handle sensitive protected health information (PHI), ensuring HIPAA compliance in digital communications is critical. While Gmail is widely used due to its simplicity and accessibility, to the surprise of many, it doesn’t meet HIPAA requirements straight out of the box.

With this challenge in mind, this post will walk you through why Gmail isn’t inherently a HIPAA compliant email service, the steps required to make it make Gmail HIPAA-compliant, and how email delivery services like LuxSci’s Secure Email Gateway offer a seamless, trusted solution for Gmail HIPAA compliance.

Why Gmail Is Not HIPAA-Compliant By Default

At its core, Gmail lacks several essential components required for HIPAA compliance, and using it without additional safeguards puts your organization at risk:

1. Limited Encryption: While Gmail does provide Transport Layer Security (TLS) encryption, which is acceptable as per the HIPAA Security Rule, this only secures emails in transit if the recipient’s email server also supports TLS.

Consequently, this basic level of encryption does not ensure the security of emails containing PHI – especially when sent to recipients outside Google’s network.

2. No Built-In HIPAA Compliance Features: Gmail on its own does not provide the necessary controls required by HIPAA, such as end-to-end encryption, audit trails, or automatic security policies for managing sensitive patient data.

3. No Business Associate Agreement (BAA) for Free Accounts: A business associate agreement (BAA) is mandatory for HIPAA compliance when a third-party provider, i.e., a business associate, handles PHI.

However, Google only offers a BAA with its paid Google Workspace (formerly G Suite) accounts, not with free Gmail accounts. Unfortunately, many healthcare organizations are unaware of this fact and fall out of HIPAA compliance if they use free Gmail accounts to send PHI.

4. Lack of Control Over User Access and Security Policies: another key HIPAA compliance requirement is strict access control, which ensures that only authorized personnel handle sensitive data.

Gmail’s standard settings are not designed with healthcare-specific compliance in mind, which makes it challenging to maintain the level of access control that the secure handling of patient data demands.

Key Considerations for Gmail and HIPAA Compliance

If you intend to use Gmail without risking the consequences of HIPAA non-compliance, here are the main steps that you need to take:

  • Upgrade to Google Workspace: This will grant you access to the enterprise-level tools and features necessary for Gmail HIPAA compliance that the free Gmail option lacks.
  • Sign a BAA with Google: Once upgraded, you can sign a BAA with Google. However, while this is an essential requirement, it does not make Gmail fully HIPAA-compliant on its own.
  • Add a Secure Email Gateway for End-to-End Encryption: You’ll need an additional layer of security on top of Google Workspace’s TLS encryption, such as a secure email gateway. This provides the end-to-end encryption required to comprehensively protect PHI in emails – when it’s at rest, as well as in transit.
  • Implement Staff Training and Security Policies: compliance isn’t just about technology, it’s about competence too. With this in mind, make sure any employees with your company who are required to handle patient data understand HIPAA regulations and PHI best practices, such as refraining from including it in email subject lines, which are not encrypted in Gmail.

Why Choose LuxSci’s Secure Email Gateway for HIPAA-Compliant Gmail

Making Gmail HIPAA-compliant can be complex, but the LuxSci Secure Email Gateway solution simplifies the process. LuxSci can be directly integrated with Google Workspace to provide robust security features that exceed HIPAA requirements, guaranteeing compliance for your Gmail communications and keep your business and your patient and customer data safe.

Here’s why LuxSci’s Secure Email Gateway is an industry-leading choice for healthcare providers and organizations:

  • End-to-End Encryption: Protects PHI both in transit and at rest, ensuring end-to-end security regardless of the recipient’s email server.
  • Comprehensive Audit and Tracking: Detailed auditing and tracking of all email communications, making it easy to monitor who accesses what information and when, a crucial component for HIPAA compliance.
  • Customizable Security Policies: Advanced controls and policies, which enable the configuration of automated safeguards that enforce HIPAA-compliant email practices across your organization.
  • User-Friendly Design: While maintaining high-security standards, LuxSci’s interface is intuitive, making it easy for your staff to securely communicate with patients without added complexity.
  • Automatic Secure Sending: Communications containing PHI can be automatically routed through secure channels, so there’s no risk of accidental insecure sending. Consequently, there’s no action required by employees to ensure encryption and HIPAA compliance.
  • Reliable Support for Compliance Needs: As the most experienced provider of secure HIPAA-compliant healthcare communications, LuxSci has acquired a reputation for providing the highest standard of support in the industry. Our skilled team provides comprehensive support that helps healthcare providers, payers and suppliers navigate the challenges and complications on the road to full HIPAA compliance
  • Scalable and Customizable Solutions: Whether you’re a small practice or a large healthcare network, LuxSci offers scalable solutions that adapt to your unique needs and can grow over time.

If you’d like to learn more about making Gmail HIPAA-compliant with LuxSci Secure Email Gateway, contact us for a call or demo today!

phi in patient communications

The Benefits of Using PHI in Patient Communications

Some healthcare organizations do not allow PHI to be sent outside the patient’s health record. However, by allowing your marketing and administrative teams to use PHI in patient communication, you can streamline operations, improve the patient experience, and increase revenue with HIPAA marketing.

Although the healthcare industry is traditionally slow to adopt new technologies, the past few years have rapidly accelerated the shift to digital communications. The reasons for these shifts are varied and will be explored in detail below. No matter the reason, one thing is certain- organizations adapting to the modern digital age are thriving, while those resisting change are falling behind in meeting patient expectations.  

Changing Technology Preferences

Rapid technological innovation has made it possible to communicate securely at scale. As broadband access has increased, people are incorporating it into their daily lives. In 2022, 92% of Americans reported using email, and 49% checked it every few hours. Many people now prefer to receive business communications via email because it is asynchronous and can be engaged with when it fits into their schedules.

healthcare technology preferences stats

Healthcare organizations that utilize email for external communication are experiencing better response rates and fewer patient no-shows. Email already fits into the daily lives of many patients and doesn’t require them to take extra steps to receive information about their healthcare journey.

The Rise of Healthcare Consumerism

Healthcare consumerism refers to patients’ personal choices and responsibility in paying for and managing their health. Patients are no longer stuck with one provider or practice. They have more choices than ever and will shop around for new providers if unsatisfied with their experience. 

If healthcare providers are not delivering a digital experience that meets patient expectations, they could risk losing patients and revenue.

reasons to change providers

In addition, as younger generations are taking control of their healthcare, they are used to digital-first experiences that are personalized to their needs. If organizations are unwilling to invest into personalized digital patient experiences, they will not adequately serve the next generation of healthcare consumers. 

Staffing Challenges

The healthcare industry is not immune to recent staffing challenges. Staffing shortages have left fewer employees available to do more tasks, including patient care. Introducing digital technology into your patient communication strategy can help automate and streamline common communication workflows like:

  • Appointment reminders
  • Pre- and post-procedure instructions
  • Health education messages
  • Vaccine reminders
  • Medication adherence reminders
  • Billing

Automating common workflows frees up time for staff to focus on urgent patient needs and improves the patient experience. 

How to Safely Use PHI in Patient Communications

Patients are already communicating with their healthcare providers one-on-one via email. The question is, how can you protect this data while communicating at scale for marketing and educational purposes? There are tools (like LuxSci’s Secure Marketing and Secure High Volume Email solutions) that are designed to support the unique security needs of the healthcare industry while providing the personalized digital experience that patients desire.

Protecting PHI in Patient Communications

PHI needs to be protected in emails with advanced encryption technology. TLS encryption should be used as often as possible because it provides a user experience like regular email without requiring a portal login. For marketing and patient education emails, TLS is sufficient to protect data and allows patients to readily engage with the email content. By properly vetting and choosing the right vendors, marketing and administrative teams can communicate with patients via email without violating HIPAA. 

Personalization at Scale

The power of PHI is undeniable. When healthcare marketers can harness healthcare data to create ultra-personalized campaigns, it increases their relevance and the likelihood that the content will be engaged with, delivering a better ROI. Our solutions integrate via API to securely personalize messages and trigger emails when specific conditions are met. This allows marketers to send relevant messages at the right time when it is relevant to the patient’s healthcare journey.

personalization stats 

Modern technology is needed to serve today’s patients. Meeting patients where they are with the information they need on the channels they prefer is vital to improving healthcare outcomes for the most vulnerable populations. Using PHI in patient communications gives your organization a comparative advantage by providing a better patient experience. 

Introducing Unified Login: Seamless Access Across Your LuxSci Accounts

At LuxSci, we’re committed to making secure communication easier and more efficient for healthcare organizations. Today, we’re excited to introduce Unified Login—a new feature that simplifies identity management and streamlines access to multiple LuxSci accounts, helping users and administrators save time and improve workflows, without sacrificing security.

If your organization manages multiple LuxSci accounts—or if you’re new to LuxSci and require multiple secure email accounts and domains—switching between them just became faster, easier, and more efficient. With Unified Login, users can seamlessly move between linked accounts without the hassle of repeated logins, ensuring uninterrupted productivity while maintaining strict security and compliance standards.

Why Unified Login?

Healthcare professionals, IT administrators & security, marketing teams, and compliance officers often need to manage multiple secure email accounts across different departments, domains, or business units. Traditionally, switching between accounts required a separate login, disrupting workflows and wasting time by requiring multiple logins and passwords.

With LuxSci’s new Unified Login feature, administrators can link user identities across accounts and domains, enabling one-click access without repeated authentication. This means:

  • More Efficiency – No more logging in and out multiple times a day. Switch identities instantly and move between accounts uninterrupted.
  • Better User Experience – Access the accounts and resources you need in seconds, with a seamless transition between roles and domains.
  • Strong Security & Compliance – Every identity switch is logged for full transparency. Actions performed under a switched identity also track who switched into the identity, ensuring security and regulatory compliance are maintained.

Real-World Use Cases

Here’s how Unified Login can benefit different healthcare functions and use cases:

Compliance Officers & IT Security

A compliance officer or IT security director conducting an audit across multiple business units can quickly switch between accounts to check email logs, security settings, and compliance reports—saving time and reducing administrative burdens.

Healthcare Marketing Teams

A healthcare marketing professional or a digital communications manager sending out segmented campaigns across different services, products, or brands can quickly and easily navigate between campaigns and results for each account or domain.

IT Administrators Managing Multiple Accounts

A hospital or health plan IT administrator overseeing multiple accounts for different departments (e.g., patient services, billing, and compliance) can now switch between accounts instantly—without re-entering credentials each time. This speeds up troubleshooting, reporting, and user management, making workflows significantly more efficient.

Physicians & Providers with Multiple Roles

A doctor working across multiple clinics or locations with separate email accounts can easily transition between them without needing to log out and back in. Whether reviewing patient communications or sending secure messages, Unified Login ensures a seamless and secure experience.

How It Works

Unified Login provides administrator-managed identity linking, ensuring organizations retain full control over who can switch between accounts. The feature supports:

  • Unique Access Separation – Users maintain distinct identities, having quick access when needed.
  • Shared & Delegated Access – Teams working across multiple accounts can transition seamlessly.
  • Administrative Access – IT and compliance teams can manage multiple accounts efficiently while maintaining strict security protocols.

The main features of Unified Login include:

  • Administrators can link individual users to other users in the same or a different account.
  • Users can switch identities with one click without the need to re-authenticate.
  • Each identity switch starts a new session, giving the user the same access and permissions as the target identity.
  • Access and audit logs reference the original user, preserving accountability.

Once configured, users will see a “Switch Identity To” section in their account menu. Clicking on a linked identity seamlessly switches to a new session with the appropriate permissions, ensuring security while keeping workflows uninterrupted. If two or more identities are available, a “View All Identities” option appears.

Designed for Secure Healthcare, Built for Convenience

As a leader in HIPAA-compliant secure communications, LuxSci understands the challenges of balancing efficiency with security. Unified Login is ideal for healthcare organizations that need:

  • Secure, streamlined workflows for managing multiple email accounts for multiple business units, departments, or locations.
  • Faster access to multiple accounts for authorized personnel without compromising compliance.
  • Reduced password fatigue for users managing multiple roles or accounts.

Get Started with LuxSci Unified Login

Current LuxSci customers interested in using this service can request that it be enabled on their account, via a support ticket. You can also refer to our technical documentation for more information. If you’re new to LuxSci, reach out and learn more today.

LuxSci vs. Paubox

LuxSci vs. Paubox: How to Choose the Right HIPAA-Compliant Email Provider

Choosing the right HIPAA-compliant email vendor is crucial for protecting patient data and ensuring compliance with healthcare regulations, including verifying HIPAA compliance and security features, evaluating ease of use and integration capabilities, assessing deliverability and performance, and understanding pricing and scalability. You should also evaluate a vendor’s customer support and company reputation.

The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) details strict guidelines for securing sensitive patient data, including Protected Health Information (PHI). As a result, healthcare providers, payers, and suppliers must use a HIPAA-compliant email provider to abide by regulations designed to safeguard PHI. 

With this in mind, this post evaluates two of today’s most popular HIPAA-compliant email providers on the market: LuxSci and Paubox. We’ll compare the two HIPAA-compliant offerings on several criteria, helping you to decide which email provider best fits the needs of your organization.

LuxSci vs. Paubox: Evaluation Criteria

We will evaluate LuxSci vs. Paubox on the following criteria: 

  • Data security and Compliance: how well each email provider safeguards PHI as per HIPAA’s requirements 
  • Performance and Scalability: the platform’s ability to conduct bulk email marketing campaigns, and scale them as a company’s engagement efforts grow.
  • Infrastructure: if it provides the necessary technical infrastructure, processes and controls to both protect sensitive patient data and support high-volume email marketing campaigns.
  • Marketing Capabilities: if the platform provides tools for optimizing and refining your communication strategies.
  • Ease of Use: how steep the learning curve is for each platform.
  • Other HIPAA-Compliant Products: if the email provider offers complementary features that will aid your patient engagement efforts. 

Now that we’ve explained the parameters by which we’ll be comparing the HIPAA compliant email providers, let’s see how LuxSci and Paubox stack up against each other. 

LuxSci vs. Paubox: How They Compare

Data Security and Compliance

Both LuxSci and Paubox perform admirably here, with both being fully HIPAA-compliant email providers, offering automated encryption that allows you to include PHI in email communications straight away. Both providers secure email data both in transit and at rest. Additionally, both are HITRUST certified, which further demonstrates a strong commitment to data privacy and security. 

When compared to Paubox, LuxSci has the edge here because it has more comprehensive encryption options. This includes highly flexible encryption: automatically setting the ideal level of security and encryption needs based on the email content, recipient and business process.

Performance and Scalability

While both email providers deliver proven solutions and enable healthcare companies to scale their email marketing campaigns accordingly, LuxSci is the better option for high-volume email marketing campaigns, including bulk sending of hundreds of thousands to millions of emails per month. This is due to the fact that LuxSci specializes in assisting large healthcare organizations with executing high volume email marketing campaigns, including companies like Athenahealth, 1800 Contacts, Eurofins, and Rotech medical equipment. Consequently, LuxSci offers enterprise-grade scalability and has developed robust solutions capable of the high throughput required for enterprise-level patient and customer engagement efforts.  

Infrastructure

Additionally, when it comes to other aspects related to infrastructure, LuxSci demonstrates an advantage. Firstly, they offer secure email hosting, while Paubox does not. Additionally, though Paubox can provide some dedicated infrastructure, e.g., single-tenancy, options, as well as high availability and disaster recovery, their capabilities are not as comprehensive as LuxSci’s. 

Marketing capabilities

Both email delivery platforms possess useful marketing tools, enabling more effective HIPAA-compliant email marketing. This includes automation for streamlining email marketing campaigns and, customization options, so your messages are both more compelling and align with your company’s branding. 

LuxSci, however, offers more comprehensive reporting capabilities than Paubox, including real-time monitoring, detailed performance metrics (e.g., deliverability, open and click-through rates, bounced emails, spam complaints, and recipient domain reporting), as well as granular segmentation options.   

Ease of use

Paubox has the edge here, being the easier of the two HIPAA-compliant email providers to deploy and for staff to get to ramp up on. Suited for more complex and sophisticated environments, LuxSci offsets this with exemplary customer support honed from decades of facilitating organizations’ HIPAA-compliant email marketing campaigns – especially for this on a large scale. 

Other HIPAA-compliant Products

Lastly, when it comes to complementary features, both LuxSci and Paubox offer secure texting functionality, allowing healthcare companies to cater to their patients and customers who prefer to communicate via SMS. And while both email providers feature secure forms for HIPAA-compliant data collection, LuxSci’s forms are more advanced, capable of handling more complex workflows, including multi-step data collection, and providing better customization options. 

Additionally, LuxSci offers secure file sharing, encrypting files at rest and in transit, allowing for even more granular access controls, and ensuring only those within your company who must handle PHI have the appropriate access permissions. This is yet another safeguard against the exposure of PHI, whether accidentally, through identity theft (e.g., session-hijacking by a cybercriminal), or even corporate espionage. 

Get Your Copy of LuxSci’s Vendor Comparison Guide

While this post focuses on comparing  LuxSci and Paubox, we have created a complete Vendor Comparison Guide, which compares 12 email providers and is packed full of essential information on HIPAA-compliant communication and how to choose the best healthcare email solution for your organization.

You can grab your copy here, and don’t hesitate to contact us to explore your options for HIPAA-compliant email further.