Category: HIPAA Compliant Forms

What Makes A HIPAA Compliant Website?

March 8, 2025

In this article, we review the requirements for what makes a HIPAA compliant website and what you need to do to ensure your website is compliant. The recent focus on tracking pixels and analytics codes by enforcement agencies has many healthcare organizations reassessing their website security and compliance. As technology has evolved over the past […]

Patient Engagement: Why Email is an Essential Channel

February 22, 2025

In today’s increasingly digital world, email is often overlooked as a channel for patient engagement. Email may not appear to be as innovative or exciting as texting, video conferencing, or mobile applications. Nevertheless, email is a powerful tool that remains widely popular and accessible to most of the population, making it an essential channel for […]

Adding HIPAA Compliance to your Web Forms in 10 minutes

January 21, 2025

Forms are pervasive on healthcare websites; the number of forms associated with medical websites is growing exponentially as everyone is scrambling toward digital transformation. The goal of a paperless office seeks to optimize time spent processing applications and managing patient data, speeding up the process of making appointments and getting referrals, meeting meaningful use, etc. […]

LuxSci Unveils New Secure Forms Features for Flexible Editing, Integrated Workflows, and Save Histories

January 20, 2025

Today at LuxSci, we’re excited to unveil new LuxSci Secure Forms features as part of an update to our HIPAA-compliant web form tool, designed to securely collect patient data and improve access to business intelligence. This includes the addition of new editing tools to the Secure Form Builder for easier and more flexible creation of […]

Securing Digital Communications in Healthcare: What You Need to Know

January 14, 2025

While digital communications with customers need to be effective in any industry to achieve their intended goal, for healthcare organizations, above all else, they must be secure. It’s critical that patient data, i.e., protected health information (PHI), is secured due to its sensitive nature and the considerable harm its exposure or corruption could cause. Consequently, […]