The Journal of the Arkansas Medical Society, Vol 115, No. 9 Med Journal March 2019 Final 2 | Page 8
IT 101 – Choosing an IT
Provider & Getting Started
T
he following answers were
provided to The Journal by Al
Aquino of Onet-IT in Little Rock
([email protected]). Aquino is the son of a ers, networks, and software that you have. For
instance, are they adept at handling compliance
issues related to the medical field? Can they read
logs, run HIPAA compliance scans, and identify
and implement HIPAA-compliant firewalls?
practicing physician and has substantial knowl-
edge of medical-field compliance concerns.
Through his company, Onet-IT, he provides sup-
port to several medical clients that include oph-
thalmology clinics, a surgery center, a cancer cen-
ter, and a law firm focused on health law. Can you expect reasonably fast service?
In my business, I have a tiered support re-
sponse time. If you have an issue that affects
business continuity, I’m going to give that prior-
ity. If a client’s software has been compromised
or there is some threat facing them, that takes
precedence over a simple software update. As of
now, 100% of my clients understand that. They
know that when they need me in an urgent man-
ner, I will be there.
Choosing an IT Provider
Does the IT provider have experience
in the field you’re in?
Does your IT company have previous experi-
ence serving medical clinics? You need someone
who understands the industry you’re in. Also, if
you use certain software, you need to make sure
that your IT provider is familiar with the systems
you have and that they can support those serv-
Basic Protections – the Bare Minimum
It’s hard to say what the “musts” are, as
hackers can attack from many angles, but ac-
cording to Aquino, there are some basic safe-
guards you must not ignore:
Live Your Dream, Learn To Fly
HIPPA has a three-tiered model of safe-
guards. It includes physical, technical and ad-
ministrative security. Your IT provider should be
able to help with these critical areas:
Physical – You must have physical security.
Many places I visit have been following a lot
of guidelines – they have the best firewalls,
they have the best antivirus and ant-intrusion
items in place. However, if anyone can walk
right into the server room, you are not physi-
cally protected. You must have that.
Technical – This is where firewalls come in.
There’s a list of firewalls that are HIPAA com-
pliant. You need anti-intrusion software – with
tracking, monitoring, and logging in place.
Administrative – You need to know who has
access. In other words, within your software
where you keep medical records, you need to
keep track of who has access to them.
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