HIPAA & Privacy

State Privacy Laws (vs. HIPAA)

State health-information privacy laws that may impose stricter requirements than HIPAA.

1 min read · Last reviewed May 23, 2026

At a glance

Category
HIPAA & Privacy
Primary sources
1
Workspace handoff
compliance binder

Where this comes up

Privacy officers and practice managers handle this — patient rights requests, accounting of disclosures, BAA reviews with new vendors, breach risk assessments after an incident, and OCR responses when a complaint lands. The 60-day breach-notification clock starts at discovery, not at investigation close.

Full definition

What it is in practice

45 CFR 160.203 preempts state law only when state law is less protective than HIPAA. Many states impose stricter rules on minor consent, behavioral health, HIV, and genetic information.

How it shows up in your practice

Build a state-law overlay on top of HIPAA policies. Multi-state practices need a per-state matrix.

Sources

Take it into the workspace

Maintain state-law overlay in the Compliance Binder

Open compliance binder
Authored by D3rx

D3rx is a healthcare-billing and compliance research aid maintained by D3rx Inc. Articles are drafted by an LLM (Anthropic Claude) against primary HHS, OCR, CMS, eCFR, NIST, and state-regulator publications, and reviewed for restraint and source fidelity by the D3rx team.

Reviewer status: a named credentialed reviewer (CHC, CHPC, or healthcare attorney) is being engaged. Until that engagement is finalized, this page does not claim credentialed review.

This glossary entry is a research aid for billing and compliance staff. It does not provide legal, medical, or financial advice and does not replace counsel. References cited link to primary sources at HHS, OCR, CMS, eCFR, NIST, and the relevant payer or industry body.