This February, the company went one step further.
"We see them asking for help with compliance issues, business associate agreements, questions about cloud computing and general compliance questions," Kobus said.
Organizations "new to the party, like cloud providers who thought they were never business associates in the first place, are having to play catch up," said Sessions.
Cloud computing in healthcare is poised for explosive growth. By the end of 2013, analysts estimated the global market would hit nearly $4 billion, representing more than 21 percent growth from 2012, according to the findings of a September 2013 Kalorama report. In comparison, health IT spending over the year was only projected to increase by nearly 11 percent.
"EMR is driving this market," said Bruce Carlson, publisher of Kalorama Information, in a Sep. 19 press statement. "Hospitals are building great systems for gathering electronic records, but they need solutions to store all of that data, and it can't be a new server wing that might compete with needed space for care."
[See also: Ready or not: HIPAA gets tougher today]