HIPAA Business Associate Agreements: What Developers Building Healthcare Integrations Need to Know
You've built a great SaaS product. A hospital wants to use it. Before any data flows, their compliance team sends you a Business Associate Agreement (BAA) and asks you to sign it. If you don't know...

Source: DEV Community
You've built a great SaaS product. A hospital wants to use it. Before any data flows, their compliance team sends you a Business Associate Agreement (BAA) and asks you to sign it. If you don't know what you're signing — or what obligations it creates — you're taking on legal liability that could cost your company millions. What Makes You a Business Associate Under HIPAA, a Business Associate is any person or organization that creates, receives, maintains, or transmits protected health information (PHI) on behalf of a covered entity (healthcare providers, health plans, clearinghouses). For software teams, this means you're a business associate if: Your application stores patient data for a clinic or hospital Your API processes, routes, or transforms PHI Your cloud infrastructure hosts ePHI workloads Your analytics platform ingests data that includes patient identifiers Your customer support team can access PHI during troubleshooting Your backup systems contain copies of ePHI The key phr