Bamboo Health aids healthcare professionals by offering a platform that streamlines patient outreach and engagement. It provides tools for appointment reminders, follow-up care, and surveys to gather patient feedback. This helps providers enhance patient communication, adherence to treatment plans, and overall patient satisfaction while improving practice efficiency.
They state on their website that Bamboo Health is HIPAA compliant which is clearly a positive sign, but the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) legislation states that you can’t stop here and you need to thoroughly vet the vendor.
According to the HIPAA rules for Covered Entities and Business Associates:
'If a covered entity engages a business associate to help it carry out its health care activities and functions, the covered entity must have a written business associate contract or other arrangement with the business associate that establishes specifically what the business associate has been engaged to do and requires the business associate to comply with the Rules’ requirements to protect the privacy and security of protected health information. In addition to these contractual obligations, business associates are directly liable for compliance with certain provisions of the HIPAA Rules.'
Source: https://www.hhs.gov/hipaa/for-professionals/covered-entities/index.html
Below we provide some general guidelines on how to first quickly screen this vendor for the HIPAA compliance fundamentals, and if all initial checks pass successfully, then to proceed and do your own in-depth audit to ensure that this vendor will qualify as your HIPAA-compliant Business Associate.
✅ They communicate they are HIPAA compliant which is a positive sign, as they legally commit from their side using such public statements.
'Bamboo Health receives and discloses Protected Health Information ("PHI") under the "TPO Exception" set forth in HIPAA. 'Source: HIPAA Compliance with Bamboo Health
✅ They state they will sign their standard BAA with covered entities/business associates, which is again a good sign because if they don’t sign a BAA then it’s a deal-breaker for HIPAA compliance.
'Bamboo Health enters into a Business Associate Agreement with every single one of its customers, and the receipt and use of PHI from any given customer is done pursuant to such Business Associate Agreement.'Source: Bamboo Health's Business Associate Agreement (BAA)
✅ They publicly outline various of the privacy & security safeguards they have in place, but these can be very broad statements and you need to check the low level details here.
'Bamboo Health takes the security of patient data very seriously and takes the steps to ensure the privacy of such information both generally, and in providing the Bamboo Health Services.'Source: Bamboo Health on Data Security
There is no one-size-fits-all set of requirements when selecting a 3rd party vendor as one of your HIPAA-compliant Business Associates, but here are some general guidelines:
First, you need to determine on which plans they offer HIPAA compliance and whether pricing makes sense for you:
You need to contact the vendor directly about which plans are eligible for HIPAA compliance.Source: BambooHealth Contact us Page
Then, you need to carefully review & sign their legal contracts, especially their Business Associate Agreement and Terms of Service (ask them for the latest versions - in some cases, you might need to sign an NDA):
Bamboo Health’s Business Associate Agreement
Bamboo Health's Terms of Service
Bamboo Health's Privacy Policy
Finally, at least once a year, reassess whether or not the vendor is still in compliance with HIPAA.
Source 1: U.S. Department of Health & Human Services HIPAA Privacy Rule Guidance Material
Source 2: U.S. Department of Health & Human Services HIPAA Security Rule Guidance Material
HIPAA compliance has no one-size-fits-all vendor assessment methodology but we have covered here various best practices on how to thoroughly evaluate Bamboo Health for HIPAA compliance, so that they can be eventually trusted to process or store your sensitive patient data.
Regardless of the above, for all your 3rd party vendors, you need to follow the fundamental HIPAA principle and always disclose to them the 'minimum necessary' information, which means only disclosing the amount of PHI you absolutely have to.
If you follow the 'minimum necessary' principle and you regularly evaluate your 3rd party vendors for their commitment to the HIPAA standards while having solid Business Associate Agreements with them in place, then you can minimize the risk of a potential HIPAA violation and decrease the probability of a damaging data breach happening in the first place.
DISCLAIMER:
The above is provided for informational purposes only and in order to help encourage adoption of security & privacy best practices for handling sensitive patient data. It does NOT constitute legal or healthcare advice in any way. The information presented here has been collected either from publicly available information or through direct email communication with the company, and everyone needs to perform their own independent HIPAA compliance audit before selecting any 3rd party vendor as their Business Associate that will process any type of their Protected Health Information (PHI). Keragon Inc is not liable for any damage or liabilities arising out of or connected in any manner with information found on this page.