Arkansas · Compliance overlay

Arkansas Healthcare Compliance.

Arkansas's Personal Information Protection Act adds 'medical information' to the categories triggering breach notification but does not impose health-information-specific privacy rules beyond HIPAA. Healthcare practices in Arkansas work to the federal baseline plus the state's reasonable-security and notice obligations.

At a glance

Breach notice window

60days

Arkansas requires notice in the most expedient time possible and without unreasonable delay. Practices typically align to HIPAA's 60-day individual-notice clock.

Reporting body

Arkansas Attorney General

Key state laws
  • Personal Information Protection ActArk. Code §§ 4-110-101 to 4-110-108

    Reasonable-security obligation and breach notice for unencrypted personal information, including medical information.

  • HIPAA Privacy, Security, and Breach Notification Rules45 CFR Parts 160 & 164

    The federal baseline that all U.S. covered entities and business associates meet. HHS Office for Civil Rights (OCR) enforces.

How Arkansas goes further than HIPAA.

The breach window in Arkansas aligns with HIPAA’s 60-day individual-notice deadline. State-law overlays here are mostly about who else gets notified, what the personal- information definition covers, and whether any named statute (CMIA, BIPA, MHMDA, HB 300, 201 CMR 17.00, SHIELD) adds substantive duties. Notice flows through Arkansas Attorney General in addition to HHS/OCR federally.

Security Risk Analysis

Turn this overlay into a defensible SRA.

Arkansas's overlay layers on top of HIPAA's federal floor. The free SRA readiness check walks a small practice through discovery, threat model, controls, and gap analysis, then assembles the review-ready binder — policies, training logs, BAAs, and a breach playbook tuned to the 60-day clock and the Arkansas Attorney General notification path.

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.

Last reviewed May 23, 2026.

This page is a research aid for compliance teams. It does not certify compliance with any state or federal law, provide legal advice, replace counsel, or guarantee an audit outcome. State statutes are amended frequently — verify citations and links against the cited primary sources before acting. The practice remains responsible for adopting and maintaining its compliance program.