How Healthcare Organizations Can Prevent HIPAA Violations in Internal Communication

Andra Bria
Andra Bria
Andra Bria
About Andra Bria
Experienced marketer, she is interested in health equity, patient experience and value-based care pathways. She believes in interoperability and collaboration for a more connected healthcare industry.
May 21, 2026
5 minutes
How Healthcare Organizations Can Prevent HIPAA Violations in Internal Communication

If your staff uses personal messaging apps to discuss patient information, that’s a HIPAA violation. Every message, photo, and file shared outside a HIPAA-compliant team chat app is outside your organization’s control.

Preventing HIPAA violations in internal communication means understanding exactly where the problem comes from and providing your teams with a better solution before the next violation occurs.

Why Personal Messaging Apps Create HIPAA Violations

Staff use personal messaging apps because they’re fast and familiar. When the existing team chat app feels clunky or is too clunky on mobile, people default to whatever’s already on their phone. 

The problem is what happens to all messages and files once it is shared on personal messaging apps. Every message, photo, or file shared through a personal messaging app saves automatically to every recipient’s device. Your organization can’t control it, monitor it, or delete it. 

HIPAA requires that only the right people have access to PHI, that your organization can control and account for that access, and that the data remain under organizational control. Personal messaging apps can’t give you any of that.

The Gaps That Turn Messaging Into a HIPAA Violation

Most HIPAA violations in internal communication occur because the messaging app being used wasn’t built for healthcare in the first place. These are the gaps that turn everyday messaging into a compliance risk.

No Business Associate Agreement

Any service provider that handles PHI on your behalf needs to sign a Business Associate Agreement (BAA), a legal contract that holds them accountable for protecting that data under HIPAA. Personal messaging apps don’t offer one.

That means every conversation your staff has about a patient via personal messaging apps is a HIPAA violation, regardless of how carefully they handle the information.

PHI Stored on Personal Devices

When a staff member sends a message, photo, or file containing PHI via a personal messaging app, that information is automatically saved to every device in the conversation. 

It stays there after they leave your organization. You have no way to remove it and no visibility into what happens to it afterward.

No Access Controls

HIPAA requires that the right people see the right information. Personal messaging apps don’t give you the controls to make that happen. You can’t set permissions by role, team, or location. You can’t limit who can access what.

When a staff member leaves, you have to manually remove them from each group chat individually. And even if you manage that, they can still access the chat history. Any files saved to their device stay there, permanently, outside your control.

No Audit Trail

If the Office for Civil Rights (OCR) investigates your organization, you’ll need to produce records: who communicated what, when, and with whom. Personal messaging apps don’t give you that. Without documentation, your organization can’t defend itself in an investigation.

How to Choose a HIPAA-Compliant Team Chat App

Stricter rules won’t fix HIPAA violations on their own. Most organizations have already told their teams not to use personal messaging apps for patient communication, but staff continue to use them because the compliant alternative is too complicated and inconvenient.

What actually works is giving your team a dedicated team chat app they’ll use because it’s intuitive and easy to use, while still giving your organization the controls it needs.

Here’s what to look for:

  • HIPAA compliant out of the box. The team chat app should include a signed BAA as a standard part of onboarding, not something you have to request separately.
  • No data on personal devices. All messages, photos, and files should be stored in the cloud, under your organization’s control. 
  • One-click offboarding. When a staff member leaves, you need to immediately and permanently revoke their access to all chats, files, and media. 
  • Admin controls. You should be able to control who can see what and who can do what, such as who can create group chats or whether staff can download media shared in the chat.
  • Multi-location support. If your organization runs across multiple sites, your team chat app should let you manage each location separately, with the right people in the right channels and admin visibility across all of them.
  • US-based data storage. The ability to store your data within the United States, if your organization requires it.
  • Intuitive and easy to use. If staff have to sit through training or navigate a clunky desktop portal, they’ll go back to personal messaging apps. The team chat app needs to be built for mobile and feel familiar from day one.

A HIPAA-compliant team chat app built for healthcare organizations that keeps your data secure and your organization in control. And because it’s intuitive and easy to use, your staff will actually use it, which is what prevents HIPAA violations in the first place.

Prevent HIPAA Violations Using a HIPAA-Compliant Team Chat App

Every message your staff sends about a patient through a personal messaging app is a HIPAA violation. It doesn’t matter how careful your team is; the app itself puts you at risk.

The solution is switching to a HIPAA-compliant team chat app that’s intuitive and easy to use, so your staff actually chooses it over texting. Start by identifying where communication is already happening in your organization, then make the switch before it becomes an OCR investigation.

Andra Bria
Article by
Andra Bria
Experienced marketer, she is interested in health equity, patient experience and value-based care pathways. She believes in interoperability and collaboration for a more connected healthcare industry.
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