SOC 2 vs HIPAA

1. Breach notifications

SOC 2 has no specific breach notification requirements, but HIPAA sure does. HIPAA’s breach notification rule specifies how and when to notify patients, the media, and the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). This is a key element your auditor will look at if you add HIPAA to your SOC 2+.

2. Government mandate

SOC 2 is an optional compliance framework that many clients ask for. HIPAA, on the other hand, is a government-mandated set of rules for anyone who handles protected health information. It is not optional by any stretch of the imagination.

This means if you handle protected health information and don’t comply with HIPAA, you are in danger of substantial fines and potential legal issues. With SOC 2, the primary danger of noncompliance is losing customers’ trust and ultimately their business.

3. Data types

HIPAA’s protections extend to a very specific set of data: protected health information. This is defined as patient data that relates to past, present, or future physical or mental health or healthcare payment. If you touch any of that data, you are obligated to comply with HIPAA.

SOC 2, on the other hand, is not specific to a certain type of data.

4. Data Retention Rate

For HIPAA is min of 6 years, for SOC 2 – it depends on requirements of the company/clients but 1 year will do for most cases

This is the most effective option among those provided to protect the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of ePHI. The federal requirement is six (6) years retention of documentation, but your state or jurisdiction may have additional requirements.
HIPAA: §164.316(b)(2)(i) / NIST CSF: ID.BE, ID.RM, PR.IP

Prodigy 13 Newsletter

Sign up for our monthly newsletter for business leaders on minimizing cybersecurity risk.

Related Articles

Security

SAML explained

SAML explained in plain English: https://www.onelogin.com/learn/saml SAML is an acronym used to describe the Security Assertion Markup Language (SAML). Its primary role in online security is

Read More
Security

Threat Hunting – Practical Guide

Resource: https://www.threathunting.net/files/hunt-evil-practical-guide-threat-hunting.pdf To begin, let’s clarify what threat hunting is: Threat hunting is the human-driven, proactive and iterative search through networks, endpoints, or datasets in

Read More