The 2026 HIPAA Compliance Checklist for Developers and IT Teams
If you're building or maintaining software that touches protected health information (PHI), HIPAA compliance isn't something you can hand off to legal and forget about. The technical safeguards are...

Source: DEV Community
If you're building or maintaining software that touches protected health information (PHI), HIPAA compliance isn't something you can hand off to legal and forget about. The technical safeguards are your responsibility. This checklist covers the requirements that actually matter for development and IT teams in 2026 — not the administrative fluff that compliance consultants pad their reports with. Access Controls (45 CFR § 164.312(a)) The Security Rule requires unique user identification, emergency access procedures, automatic logoff, and encryption/decryption. Here's what that means in practice: Unique user IDs for every system user — No shared accounts. Ever. This includes service accounts, database connections, and API keys. Every action touching PHI needs to trace back to an individual. Role-based access control (RBAC) — Implement the minimum necessary standard. A billing clerk doesn't need access to clinical notes. A developer doesn't need production PHI access for debugging. Automa