Summary

The proposed HIPAA Security Rule updates signal a shift in how regulators are thinking about scope, safeguards, and consistency across systems that store or touch ePHI. In this article, Dan Kompare of Harmony Healthcare IT breaks down how those changes may affect legacy data platforms and archival environments in particular. He outlines what the proposed focus areas mean for healthcare organizations and how secure archiving practices can help support compliance as expectations evolve.

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Is your archive strategy ready for HIPAA Security Rule Changes?

How evolving scope and safeguards affect legacy data platforms

By Dan Kompare

In my role overseeing security and compliance architecture at Harmony Healthcare IT, I focus on translating evolving regulatory requirements into platform‑level protections that healthcare organizations can rely on over time. 

As Chris Morrison, our Director of Governance and Compliance, outlined in a companion piece, the proposed updates to the HIPAA Security Rule reflect a clear shift in how regulators are thinking about scope, safeguards, and consistency across systems that store or touch electronic protected health information (ePHI). 

The table below builds on that context by highlighting what these changes mean for healthcare organizations, and how Harmony Healthcare IT supports compliance, particularly around legacy data archiving

Aligning Legacy Data Platforms with the Proposed HIPAA Security Rule 

For more detail on the proposed changes, read HIPAA Security Rule Changes: 4 Key Implications”  

Putting the Proposed Changes into Practice

While the final HIPAA Security Rule may continue to evolve, the proposal offers a view into where enforcement is headed: broader scope and less tolerance for gaps across systems that store ePHI.

Platforms that centralize legacy and historical data into governed, secure environments can play a critical role in helping organizations respond to these shifts by simplifying visibility, strengthening safeguards, and supporting long‑term resilience as requirements evolve.

These expectations also carry added weight as more healthcare organizations apply AI‑driven tools across clinical, operational, and research use cases. AI depends on secure, well‑governed data environments where ePHI is protected consistently, access is controlled, and data provenance and flows are clearly understood. The same platform‑level safeguards that support HIPAA Security Rule compliance are foundational to using AI responsibly and at scale.

Dan Kompare is VP of Information Systems at Harmony Healthcare IT.

Note: This content reflects analysis of the HIPAA Security Rule as proposed at the time of publication. While final requirements may evolve, the themes outlined above reflect long‑standing Security Rule principles and clearly articulated enforcement priorities.

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