HIPAA's Privacy Rule applies to your website when it handles Protected Health Information—information that identifies a patient and relates to their health condition, treatment, or payment. This is educational content, not legal advice; verify requirements with a healthcare compliance attorney for your specific situation.
When HIPAA applies to your website:
- Contact forms that ask about symptoms, conditions, or appointment reasons
- Patient portals where families access records or communicate with providers
- Online scheduling systems that collect health-related information
- Chat features or messaging tools used for clinical communication
When HIPAA typically doesn't apply:
- General contact forms asking only for name, email, and phone number
- Educational blog content about pediatric health topics
- Staff bios and practice information pages
- Location and hours information
The critical requirement is implementing appropriate safeguards when PHI is involved. This means SSL encryption (the padlock icon in browsers), secure form transmission, and Business Associate Agreements with any vendor who might access patient data—including your website hosting company, form provider, and email marketing platform if used for appointment reminders.
Many pediatric practices over-correct by avoiding all online functionality, which hurts patient experience and competitive positioning. The goal is appropriate security for the data you're handling, not avoiding digital tools entirely.