Physicians are required to receive HIPAA training because they are members of a covered entity’s workforce and handle Protected Health Information as a core function of their professional practice, making them subject to the same training obligations under the HIPAA Privacy Rule and the HIPAA Security Rule that apply to every other workforce member. The assumption that clinical expertise or medical licensure satisfies the HIPAA training requirement is incorrect. HIPAA training addresses regulatory obligations, permitted and prohibited uses and disclosures of PHI, security incident reporting, and patient rights that are distinct from clinical competency and are not covered by medical education or continuing professional development programs. The HIPAA Journal’s HIPAA Training for Employees is an online course satisfying HIPAA training requirements regarding HIPAA rules and regulations for covered entities of all sizes, suitable for new hire onboarding and annual refresher training for all workforce members including physicians and clinical staff.
Why Clinical Role Does Not Substitute for HIPAA Training
Physicians routinely make decisions that carry direct HIPAA implications: discussing patient information with family members, responding to requests for medical records, communicating through messaging applications, and accessing records of patients outside their direct care. Without HIPAA training, those decisions are made without a working understanding of the regulatory standards that govern them. Enforcement actions and breach investigations have involved physicians whose clinical judgment was sound but whose handling of PHI produced violations that training would have prevented.




