Those exorbitant fines are why cyber breach insurance exists.
If you pay for HIPAA compliance services, you may already be protected.
According to the Ponemon Institute, healthcare has the highest cost of a data breach. Unlike stolen credit cards, stolen patient health information is a lot more lucrative on the black market, and harder for customers to resolve. That means higher class action lawsuits, more government fines, and a higher rate of lost patients who no longer trust you.
That’s where cyber insurance can help.
The HHS says their fines are meant to hurt, not kill, but they aren’t taking into account the other costs that affect healthcare organizations after a data breach.
The average cost per patient record compromised in 2013 was $359. At 5,000 records lost, that would be more than $1.7 million.
See also: How Much Does a Data Breach Cost Your Organization?
These estimates could exceed or decrease, based on the size of your breach. For example, one woman filed a $5 million class action lawsuit against Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield for their data breach that could affect 80 million current and former customers.
Depending on how much financial assistance you would like to receive after a breach, your size, your annual revenue, and your industry, HIPAA cyber insurance premiums can cost healthcare providers from $650 to $120,000 annually.
But you might not need HIPAA breach insurance, or you might already be covered.
If you have a vendor that helps you with HIPAA compliance, you might already be protected up to a certain amount. Let me explain.
Some HIPAA compliance vendors have a limited guarantee on their HIPAA compliance services. If their services don’t help protect you from data breach, you may be reimbursed up to $100,000 for specific costs associated with the breach Instead of costing you a premium, it’s wrapped up as an assurance in the services you’ve already purchased.
But don’t just assume you’re protected. Not all HIPAA vendors include this type of breach assurance.
For large health organizations handling an exceptionally large quantity of patient data, it may make sense to pay the premium for cyber insurance…especially if you don’t have a robust IT security team and you have not had a 3rd party validate your HIPAA compliance, since you are at greater risk of a large data breach in your future.
But remember, you might already be protected through your HIPAA vendor through a HIPAA breach services guarantee.