Key strategies to improve your university records security policy
Records management underpins much of the student, faculty and administrative experiences. It's up to colleges and universities to ensure that they are positive experiences — and that the related records are secure. Developing a strong records security policy is a key issue facing colleges and universities today. Education, along with healthcare and retail, are among the industries that face the majority of security threats, according Symantec.
These threats, paired with stringent federal regulations like the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) and the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), have led higher education IT directors to make network and data security a top priority. What's more, the variety of records — human resources records for faculty and other staff, student records, health records, and various administrative documents — and systems involved — can make this challenge even more daunting.
By digitizing records in secure storage, the efficiency of accessing records can be balanced with security.
How can your college or university protect its most sensitive information? While every situation is unique, it can help to model your approach to records security off past successes. With that in mind, here are a few key strategies for improving your records management security policy.
Digitizing legacy information
While digitization is a key priority, the current reality for many campuses is that physical records are still very much a part of the administrative experience. Whether on paper or microfilm, physical records are often vulnerable to breaches. And securing them, often inside a vault, can complicate the workflow for accessing records. By digitizing records in secure storage, efficiency in accessing records can be balanced with security.
Rethinking the records submissions process
FERPA, HIPAA and even NCAA regulations also have a compliance aspect alongside security — and digitizing the records submission process can benefit both. Enabling students, faculty and staff to submit all of their documents — transcripts, medical records, letters of recommendation, and so on — electronically via a web-based records system means less labor and resources for manually capturing information, and fewer opportunities for security issues.
The higher education records management security playbook
How can your college or university protect its most sensitive information? Find out.
Automatically tracking and indexing these documents into an electronic data management (EDM) system once they're submitted can help establish and preserve a chain of custody, while also making it easier to report on the status and security of these records.
These examples are just a start for considering how your college or university's records management can augment your security policy.
Source: RICOH USA
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