In 2007, a group of healthcare organizations, technology companies, and government agencies—including the American Hospital Association, Blue Cross Blue Shield Association, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), McKesson Corporation, and Microsoft—got together to create a unified approach to information security and privacy.
Image source: https://hitrustalliance.net/the-hitrust-approach/
The result was the Health Information Trust Alliance’s Common Security Framework (HITRUST CSF). The HITRUST framework provides a comprehensive set of security controls and best practices to help organizations protect their data. More than 100 different controls cover a range of domains, from device and network security to employee education and incident management.
HITRUST’s integrated approach ensures all security components are aligned, maintained, and strong enough to support your organization’s specific information risk management and compliance requirements. While HITRUST is voluntary, it’s designed to help businesses comply with mandatory regulations and preferred security standards, such as HIPAA, GDPR, and ISO 27001.
HITRUST has grown to become the most popular information security and privacy certification compliance program in the world, with more than 1,000 organizations certified globally. Organizations in the healthcare industry most commonly follow HITRUST compliance standards, but any organization can use the framework to protect sensitive data.
Companies that achieve HITRUST certification—and maintain it—reduce their vulnerability to cyberattacks; increase trust among customers, investors, and other stakeholders; and improve operational efficiency. Here are just a few scenarios where HITRUST can make your life easier:
Because HITRUST CSF is actively managed and updated to meet the latest risk factors, security threats, and regulatory requirements, you’ll always have the best protection available. Now in version 11.2.0, HITRUST CSF offers a significant advantage over other frameworks with limited or no active management, such as PCI and NIST.
Obtaining and maintaining HITRUST certification requires a commitment of resources across your organization, including IT staff, compliance, risk management teams, and a project coordinator. Depending on the maturity of your existing security program, you can expect your resource team to put in 20–30 hours a week for two to three months. The HITRUST certification cost can range from several thousand dollars to several hundred thousand dollars, depending on your organization size and complexity of your tools and processes. If you’re new to HITRUST and your company is large and complex, your commitment will be higher.
The HITRUST CSF framework is available for qualifying organizations at no charge, but all organizations must purchase a HITRUST MyCSF SaaS subscription. This web portal is where you manage your audit and remediation efforts.
Hiring an outside assessor can also be useful for getting through the certification process, and you may need to purchase additional tools to address any security issues you need to fix before you can get certified.
Here are the basic steps involved in the HITRUST certification process:
Identify the sensitive information your company obtains or generates, such as medical records, billing and payment information, and other Personally Identifiable Information (PII).
Map your data flow and diagram your network. Like the first step, this effort will require assistance from IT and any departments that handle sensitive information.
HITRUST offers three levels of assessment based on your current needs:
Basic Current-State (bC) Self-Assessment
This is a strong starting point for implementing HITRUST and lets your stakeholders know that you’re working towards certification
Implemented 1-Year (i1) Validated Assessment
This option provides a good level of assurance for a relatively modest effort. It’s for organizations that want certification but aren’t prepared, or don’t need, to go through a more extensive r2 Assessment.
Risk-Based 2-Year (r2) Validated Assessment
The highest level of assurance is ideal for organizations with greater risk exposure due to data volumes, regulatory compliance, and other risk factors.
With HITRUST, the more you put in, the more you get out. Image source: https://hitrustalliance.net/a-guide-to-examining-the-return-on-investment-roi-for-a-hitrust-certification/
Options i1 and r2 above offer Readiness Assessments that help you evaluate your security controls against HITRUST controls requirements, so you can understand the strength of the framework and determine any gaps you need to remediate. The Readiness Assessment will position your security posture to achieve a successful Validated Assessment and HITRUST certification.
An authorized external assessor must perform the HITRUST CSF Validated Assessment. The assessor collects and submits evidence about your security controls to HITRUST. If you meet the HITRUST CSF certification standards, you’ll receive your certification. It’s valid for two years, but you’ll need to undergo an interim assessment after one year.
Getting HITRUST CSF certified requires leadership buy-in, as the preparation process takes time and money. Here are common concerns and ways to address them:
It’s true that preparing for a HITRUST certification costs money: there are fees to pay to HITRUST, to an auditor, and possibly for additional team resources. Ways to reduce potential costs include:
Meeting the requirements of any of the HITRUST CSF assessments is serious business, but there are ways to lighten the lift and reduce time required by your team:
Start with a simple comparison outlining the potential costs of HITRUST with the potential revenue the additional certification would unlock. Ask auditors, customers, prospects, and partners for their thoughts on your model, and share it with leadership.
Getting HITRUST CSF certified can be a mostly manual process that involves collecting screenshots and documents from teams across your organization via email, and then having to organize them in your MyCSF portal.
Not only is this tedious and time-consuming, but the information is generally outdated as soon as it’s sent out.
TrustCloud’s API-powered programmatic evidence collection to save your team’s time and make HITRUST certification easier to achieve. This seamless integration gives auditors the info they need without asking your team for a single document, and you can avoid the pre-audit crunch.
To learn more about how our cloud-based platform automates the HITRUST assessment and certification process—and why our clients pass 100% of their audits with flying colors—contact us to arrange a demo with one of our HITRUST experts.
The post How to Get HITRUST Certified—and Why first appeared on TrustCloud.
*** This is a Security Bloggers Network syndicated blog from TrustCloud authored by Satya Moutairou. Read the original post at: https://www.trustcloud.ai/hitrust/how-to-get-hitrust-certified-and-why/