Alberta HIA: Can You Legally Put Patient Data in the US Cloud?
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Is your hospital’s cloud strategy breaking the law?
In this episode of the DjamgaMind Canada Series, we simulate a high-stakes debate between a frustrated Hospital CIO and a strict Privacy Commissioner regarding the Alberta Health Information Act (HIA).
The central question: Can you legally process Alberta patient data on US servers (AWS, Google, Azure)?
Most founders and executives think the answer is a hard "No." The reality is a complicated "Maybe"—but only if you navigate the minefield of Section 60.
We decode:
- The "US Cloud" Myth: Does the HIA explicitly ban data from leaving Canada? (The answer will surprise you).
- Section 60 Explained: The specific legal requirements for "disclosing" health information outside of Alberta.
- The PIA Trap: Why deploying any new tool without a Privacy Impact Assessment is a direct violation of the Act.
- Data Sovereignty vs. Residency: The critical difference between where data "lives" and whose laws it obeys.
- The Custodian Trap: Why the hospital (Custodian) carries 100% of the liability, even if the vendor (Information Manager) causes the breach.
Source Document:
- Alberta Health Information Act (HIA) - Official Text
About DjamgaMind: DjamgaMind is the AI-powered audio intelligence platform for Healthcare Executives. We turn complex regulations (Bill C-27, HIA, CMS-0057-F) into 10-minute executive briefings.
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Keywords / Tags (For Transistor Settings)
Alberta Health Information Act, HIA, OIPC Alberta, Privacy Impact Assessment, PIA, Data Residency, Digital Health Canada, AHS Compliance, Hospital CIO, Calgary Tech, Section 60, US Cloud Act