HIPAA Compliance for Periodontics in Seattle, Washington
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Recommended for Periodontics in Seattle
Get Your Practice HIPAA Compliant in 2026
Medcurity is built specifically for dental practices — structured compliance workflows, annual risk assessment, and documentation that holds up in an OCR audit.
Get HIPAA Compliant with Medcurity →From $499/year — built for dental practices
Why HIPAA Compliance Is Critical for Periodontics Practices
Implant and periodontal surgeries involve imaging, dental labs, and anesthesia records — each touching a different vendor BAA. Multi-specialist referral workflows are the #1 compliance gap for periodontal practices in WA.
Most Common HIPAA Violations for Periodontics in Washington
- 1Lab technician PHI access without executed BAA
- 2Missing specialty-specific workforce HIPAA training documentation
- 3Unencrypted patient data in practice management export files
Top operational pain: Long-term patient record retention and access audit logging
Next step: Complete your Security Risk Analysis (SRA)
The SRA is the #1 document OCR requests in every audit — and the most common gap in Periodontics practices.
Use the free 2026 SRA Checklist →Need the actual compliance documents?
The 2026 Dental HIPAA SOP Kit includes 47 ready-to-use templates — BAAs, SRA forms, staff training checklists, and breach protocols. No subscription. Instant download.
2026 HIPAA Security Mandates — What's New for Dental Practices
The 2026 HIPAA Security Rule update introduced mandatory technical safeguards that apply to every dental covered entity, regardless of size.
- 1Annual Penetration Testing
Required for all dental covered entities. Typical cost: $3,000–$8,000/year. Tests must be performed by a qualified third party and results documented.
- 2Biannual Vulnerability Scans
Network vulnerability scans required every 6 months. OCR auditors request scan reports as a first-line document request in all investigations.
- 3Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA)
Mandatory on all systems accessing ePHI. Practices without MFA on EHR, billing, or imaging systems are in active violation as of 2026.
- 4Encryption at Rest and In Transit
All ePHI must be encrypted whether stored locally, in the cloud, or transmitted. Unencrypted backup drives and email are among the most-cited 2026 violations.
Washington My Health MY Data Act (SB 1155, effective 2024)
Fine range: Private right of action; $7,500 per intentional violation + actual damages
Washington's My Health MY Data Act (MHMDA), effective March 2024, is the strictest state health privacy law in the US outside of California. It covers 'consumer health data' that is outside HIPAA's scope — including data collected via apps, wearables, and any digital health tool — and grants consumers a private right to sue.
Impact on Periodontics Practices in Seattle
Washington dental practices face dual compliance: HIPAA for clinical ePHI plus MHMDA for any patient health data collected outside clinical systems. If a Seattle practice uses a patient app, website analytics that infer health status, or any third-party tool that processes health-related signals, MHMDA applies. Patients can sue practices directly — without filing with any agency — for $7,500 per violation. There is no cure period once a violation occurs.
Key Requirements
- 1Obtain consumer consent before collecting, sharing, or selling any health data — consent must be separate from general terms of service
- 2Honor consumer deletion requests for health data within 45 days — applies to data held by practice and any processors
- 3No geofencing within 2,000 feet of any healthcare facility to collect health data — directly relevant to dental practices in dense urban areas
Is your team HIPAA trained and documented?
Training documentation is the #2 gap OCR finds in Periodontics audits. Staff training must be documented before any employee accesses patient data.
See the 2026 HIPAA Training Requirements →Washington State Dental Quality Assurance Commission (DQAC)
Records retention requirement: 10 years from the date of last treatment for adults; for minors, until the patient's 21st birthday or 10 years from the date of last treatment, whichever is later.
What Board Investigators Check for HIPAA Compliance
- 1MHMDA consumer health data audit — Washington DQAC investigators now review whether practices have assessed their digital tools for MHMDA applicability
- 2Patient app and portal consent documentation — any Seattle practice using a third-party patient app must demonstrate patient consent for health data collection under MHMDA
- 3Encryption of all wireless ePHI transmissions — required under both HIPAA 2026 rules and Washington's strict security standards
- 4Deletion request response procedures — Washington's MHMDA gives patients the right to demand deletion of health data from all systems, including third-party vendors
Enforcement Trend
Washington's MHMDA has created the most aggressive state-level health privacy enforcement environment outside California. The DQAC has begun incorporating MHMDA compliance questions into its license renewal process for dental practices in King County and Pierce County. Practices using analytics tools on their websites that track health-related behavior face immediate MHMDA exposure without proper consent mechanisms.
2026 HIPAA Compliance Tools — Side-by-Side Comparison
Reviewed and ranked for dental practices. Updated May 2026.
| Tool | Key Feature | Best For | Pricing | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
MedcurityBest for Dental Practices | Structured compliance workflows + annual risk assessment built for dental HIPAA | Practices that want a clear, documented path to OCR-audit-ready compliance | $499 / year | Get Started → |
Compliancy GroupADA Official Partner | Live "Compliance Coach" guidance + official Seal of Compliance | ADA members and practices that want white-glove guidance | Custom pricing | Learn More |
* This site may earn a commission if you purchase through our links. This does not affect our recommendations.
Get the 2026 HIPAA Compliance Checklist — Free
The 6 items OCR checks first in every dental audit. Sent instantly to your inbox.
Recommended for Periodontics in Seattle
Get Your Practice HIPAA Compliant in 2026
Medcurity is built specifically for dental practices — structured compliance workflows, annual risk assessment, and documentation that holds up in an OCR audit.
Get HIPAA Compliant with Medcurity →From $499/year — built for dental practices
Frequently Asked Questions — Periodontics HIPAA Compliance in Washington
What makes HIPAA compliance different for periodontal practices in Washington?
Periodontal practices generate long-term chronic care records and routinely exchange PHI with oral surgeons, implant labs, general dentists, and insurance networks. This multi-directional PHI flow creates more BAA exposure points than a typical general dental practice. Washington's average HIPAA fine of $38,000 per violation reflects how quickly costs accumulate when multiple BAAs are missing or expired.
Do dental implant labs require a signed BAA?
Yes. Any dental laboratory that receives patient PHI — including implant specs, surgical guides, or patient records tied to prosthetic cases — is a Business Associate under HIPAA. A signed BAA is required before any PHI can be shared. Digital case submissions (3D files, intraoral scans) are explicitly classified as ePHI under the 2026 HIPAA Security Rule, making this one of the most actively audited compliance gaps in periodontal practices.
How should a Seattle periodontal practice handle PHI when co-managing cases with oral surgeons?
Co-management arrangements between periodontists and oral surgeons require a signed BAA between practices unless both are part of the same covered entity. PHI shared for treatment purposes falls under the Treatment exception but must still be transmitted securely — encrypted email or a HIPAA-compliant referral platform. Without a formal referral authorization on file, each disclosure is independently reviewable by OCR. Washington enforcement has increasingly focused on specialty co-management workflows as a compliance gap.
How long must a periodontal practice retain patient records under HIPAA?
Under HIPAA, covered entities must retain documentation of their privacy and security policies for 6 years. However, Washington state law governs actual patient record retention — most states require 7–10 years for adult patients and until age 21 for minors. Periodontal implant records often need longer retention due to ongoing prosthetic warranties and potential litigation. Your practice's Records Retention Policy (a required HIPAA document) must specify the applicable Washington timeframe explicitly.
What is the #1 HIPAA violation for periodontal practices in Washington?
The most common HIPAA violation cited in Washington periodontal practice audits is a missing or expired BAA with the dental laboratory handling implant cases. As practices switch labs or upgrade to digital workflows, BAAs frequently go unsigned or lapse. OCR treats each case transmitted without an active BAA as a separate violation — for a busy implant practice, this can accumulate rapidly. After lab BAAs, unencrypted email transmission to referring dentists is the second most common finding.
Does a periodontal practice need a separate HIPAA compliance program from the referring general dental office?
Yes. Each covered entity requires its own HIPAA compliance program — a specialty practice cannot rely on the referring general dentist's policies. This means your own Security Risk Analysis, staff training program, BAA inventory, and Privacy Officer designation. The only exception is if both practices operate under a single legal entity with unified ownership. OCR frequently encounters periodontal practices that assumed their affiliation with a larger group covered compliance — it does not.
Recommended for Periodontics in Seattle
Get Your Practice HIPAA Compliant in 2026
Medcurity is built specifically for dental practices — structured compliance workflows, annual risk assessment, and documentation that holds up in an OCR audit.
Get HIPAA Compliant with Medcurity →From $499/year — built for dental practices
Next Step After Compliance
Streamline Patient Scheduling for Your Seattle Practice
Once your Periodontics practice is HIPAA compliant, the next highest-impact upgrade is online scheduling. NexHealth integrates directly with your existing practice management software and lets patients book, confirm, and fill out intake forms online — reducing no-shows and front-desk workload.
See How NexHealth Works for Periodontics →Related HIPAA Compliance Guides
Periodontics — Other States
- Periodontics in Dallas, Texas →Avg fine: $35,000
- Periodontics in Miami, Florida →Avg fine: $42,000
- Periodontics in Phoenix, Arizona →Avg fine: $28,000
Seattle — Other Specialties
Compliance Essentials
References & Official Sources
- ↗HHS OCR — HIPAA Enforcement Actions
- ↗HHS — HIPAA Security Rule Final Rule 2026
- ↗HHS OCR — HIPAA Audit Program
- ↗ADA — HIPAA Compliance Resources for Dental Practices
- ↗HHS — Breach Notification Rule
Content on this page reflects requirements as published by HHS/OCR and the ADA. Last reviewed May 2026. Not legal advice.