By Gil Vidals, , HIPAA Blog, Resources

When it comes to choosing a HIPAA hosting plan, it’s important to know that not every hosting environment is the same. The difference in price between providers (and different plans offered by the same provider) is often driven by the features offered in that hosting environment. Aside from the absolute minimum amenities required by HIPAA, every host is obliged to offer a variety of options to fit a variety of implementations.

For instance, HIPAA requires that logs are kept and rotated with regularity and that passwords and certificates are frequently changed. In an entry-level solution these requirements would be met, but for some aspects, the onus would be on the customer rather than the provider to implement them.

In the instance where logs are not rotated frequently enough, or it is cumbersome to frequently change passwords, the covered entity is liable, not the hosting provider.

However, at scale, it is sometimes worthwhile to purchase a higher tier of HIPAA hosting. Certain technical aspects of hosting, such as intrusion detection, OS updates, or manual firewall rules may be things that a covered entity can do themselves, but are available as “managed services” at this higher level of hosting.

In this case, the hosting provider takes responsibility for these aspects of adhering to HIPAA Compliance. Obviously, this is a greater responsibility in terms of time and liability, so with managed services, the cost of hosting increases rapidly. It is often possible to purchase certain services as managed and handle the rest of them oneself.

In addition to the differences in services, the differences in HIPAA hosting plans are derived from the resource usage that the server or virtual machine (VM) is provisioned for.

For example, paying for a low-level plan often means that one will have a diminished amount of RAM, CPU, or disk space. In this case, it often pays to pinch pennies. Many professionals think of “more is more” when it comes to a machine’s resources; yet in many cases, the bottleneck in a workflow is not caused by RAM or CPU, but external factors.

Purchasing the minimum amount of RAM/CPU/Bandwidth initially is a great cost-saving measure that will not have any noticeable influence on user-experience. If doing so does have such an effect, it is possible to simply upgrade one’s plan or resources. Starting from the bottom and ratcheting up gradually is a smart choice in all hosting scenarios, and HIPAA hosting is no different.

When it comes to choosing a HIPAA hosting plan, it is important to figure out what services will need to be handled internally, and which can be purchased as managed services. In the early days of a startup, time is often at a premium, especially as manpower is minimal.

Managed services are a great way to push the burden of HIPAA Compliance onto a skilled professional when the time or manpower is not available to handle these types of responsibilities.

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Gil Vidals is the president and CTO of HIPAA Vault. He is a passionate, subject matter expert on HIPAA compliance and the healthcare cloud, and co-host of the HIPAA Vault podcast. Since 1997, Gil’s mission has been to provide uncompromising and affordable HIPAA compliant hosting solutions to commercial and government clients, helping protect their sensitive health information from data breaches and security vulnerabilities. HIPAA Vault has been recognized as an Inc. 5000 company and a Clutch Top B2B company. He can be reached here on Linkedin.