Secure Forms Built for Healthcare Teams

Easily build secure,
HIPAA friendly forms

Jotform offers HIPAA-friendly forms making it easy for patients to submit their data securely. From intake to consent forms, streamline your workflow—all in one place.

Please follow the HIPAA rules to ensure that your handling of personal health information complies with HIPAA.

Easily build secure, HIPAA friendly forms

Key Jotform HIPAA Form Features

Jotform is loaded with powerful features to help you collect and manage sensitive patient information. Check out what makes Jotform a leader in forms you can use as part of your HIPAA compliance efforts.

  • Drag and drop form elements like dropdowns to easily build your patient intake form.

    Building forms that enable HIPAA compliance with Jotform just takes a couple of minutes and zero technical skill. Every question field can be added with a single click.

Youtube Video Popup about HIPAA Friendly Forms
Youtube Video Popup about HIPAA Friendly Forms

Collect sensitive healthcare data with Jotform

Collecting patient information has always been a headache. Jotform makes it simple for anyone in your organization to create forms that make HIPAA compliance easier and improve the overall patient experience. Say goodbye to messy paper forms!

With Jotform, you can collect and centralize all of your medical information, patient feedback, employee applications, and even payments into one place. Plus, sensitive patient data remains private and secure.

Start securely collecting information with HIPAA forms today.

FAQ

  • What is HIPAA?

    HIPAA stands for the Health and Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996. This U.S. law maintains strict regulations over who has access to patient medical information and how that information may be shared.

    Under HIPAA, covered entities may use or disclose a patient’s protected health information (PHI) without a patient’s permission only under the following exceptions:

    • Treatment, healthcare operations, and payment purposes
    • Sharing information with the patient
    • Offering the opportunity to confirm or reject the disclosure of PHI
    • Using within a limited data set for public health, research, or healthcare operations
    • An unavoidable, limited incident that requires disclosure

    Sharing patient medical information may not require approval if the reason for sharing it meets one of 12 national priority purposes. These are rare and unique exceptions to a rule that is otherwise stringent in its requirements for protection of a patient’s personal, private medical information.

  • Why was HIPAA created?

  • What are HIPAA forms?

  • Who is covered by HIPAA?

  • Who enforces HIPAA?

  • Why is HIPAA compliance important?

  • What is protected health information (PHI)?

  • Does Jotform’s WordPress plug-in help enable HIPAA compliance?