Compliance Is No Longer Optional
As cyber threats continue to rise, compliance has become a critical component of every organization’s cybersecurity strategy. Whether your business handles healthcare data, supports government contracts, or simply wants to maintain cyber insurance coverage, understanding today’s compliance requirements is essential for managing risk and protecting your business.
HIPAA Updates Raise the Bar for Healthcare Organizations
Healthcare providers, medical practices, billing companies, and any organization handling electronic Protected Health Information (ePHI) should pay close attention to ongoing HIPAA Security Rule updates. Recent proposals from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services place greater emphasis on cybersecurity controls such as mandatory multi-factor authentication (MFA), encryption, vulnerability management, risk assessments, and incident response planning. These changes are designed to strengthen defenses against the growing number of ransomware and data breach incidents targeting healthcare organizations.
CMMC Compliance Is Now a Business Requirement
For companies that work with the Department of Defense, Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification (CMMC) 2.0 is no longer something to plan for “someday.” The Department of Defense officially launched the CMMC program rollout, requiring contractors and subcontractors that handle Federal Contract Information (FCI) or Controlled Unclassified Information (CUI) to demonstrate compliance with specific cybersecurity controls. Organizations that fail to meet the required standards may risk losing contract eligibility.
While many assume CMMC only applies to large defense contractors, small and mid-sized businesses throughout the supply chain are equally affected.
Cyber Insurance and Compliance Go Hand in Hand
One of the biggest misconceptions businesses have is that cyber insurance alone will protect them after a cyberattack. In reality, many insurance carriers now require organizations to maintain specific security controls before issuing policies—or approving claims.
Controls such as MFA, endpoint protection, security awareness training, vulnerability management, backup verification, identity protection, and documented security policies are increasingly becoming baseline requirements. The same safeguards required for HIPAA and CMMC compliance are often the controls insurers expect to see when evaluating a claim.
Simply put: if your organization cannot demonstrate that appropriate controls were in place before an incident, you may face reduced coverage or claim disputes when you need protection most.
Is Your Business Prepared?
Ask yourself:
- Do we know which compliance requirements apply to our business?
- Are our cybersecurity controls aligned with current regulations and insurance requirements?
- Could we prove compliance if we were audited or experienced a breach?
A proactive approach to Governance, Risk, and Compliance (GRC) helps organizations reduce risk, improve security posture, and avoid costly surprises.
As your Technology Advisor, we can help assess your compliance exposure, identify gaps, and recommend practical solutions to strengthen security while supporting HIPAA, CMMC, and cyber insurance requirements. The best time to prepare is before an audit, cyberattack, or insurance claim occurs.
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