Most marketing setups have hidden compliance risks. Artgro fixes how your tracking, forms, and campaigns handle patient data.

Most healthcare marketing setups look normal, but they’re built using tools and configurations that weren’t designed for patient data. That’s where risk starts.
Agencies often apply the same tracking, forms, and ad setups they use in other industries. On the surface, everything works. Behind the scenes, data is being collected or used in ways that don’t account for how patient information needs to be handled.
Here’s where that usually happens:
It’s easy to get this wrong without realizing it.
Contact us and let’s review your current setup and identify where data is being handled in ways that create risk.
HIPAA is a federal law that protects patient health information – anything that can identify a person and relate to their health, treatment, or payment. In marketing, that risk shows up when your tools collect, store, or use data that could be tied back to a patient.
This isn’t about clinical compliance. It’s about how your marketing setup handles data behind the scenes.
When someone fills out a form, uses chat, or is tracked across pages, information is being captured. If that data can be connected to a patient or a specific condition, it needs to be handled in a way that avoids exposure.
That’s where most issues happen. Know that standard marketing tools are built to collect and use data freely unless they’re configured otherwise.
What matters in a marketing context is:
This is about how your marketing tools handle patient data, not just whether you think you’re compliant. You can contact us now at Artgro, and let’s look at how your current setup collects and uses information. Let’s make sure nothing is being handled in a way that creates risk.

Most compliance issues don’t come from intentional misuse – they come from how standard marketing setups work by default. What’s considered normal in other industries can create risk in healthcare when patient-related data is involved.
Here’s where that typically shows up:
Tracking tools can capture page views, form inputs, and user behavior that may be tied to a patient or condition if not controlled properly.
Ad platforms track what pages users visit. When those pages relate to specific treatments or conditions, that behavior can reveal sensitive information.
Contact forms, live chat, and booking tools often collect names, symptoms, or treatment inquiries without safeguards on how that data is stored or transmitted.
Standard email platforms can store and process patient-related information without the protections required for healthcare use.
None of these setups looks unusual, but in healthcare, they can create real exposure if they’re not configured correctly. And we have to know that common setups create risk.
Today, walk through your current setup with our team and identify where tracking, forms, or campaigns may be handling data in ways that need to be corrected.
You don’t need to stop marketing to stay compliant – you need to control how your setup handles data. The difference isn’t the channels you use; it’s how everything is configured behind the scenes.
Here’s what that looks like in practice:
Indeed, marketing can still perform, but it has to be set up with control. Contact us at Artgro so we can review your current setup and identify what needs to be adjusted so your campaigns run without creating unnecessary risk.

You can still run effective campaigns, but you just can’t run them the same way you would in other industries. The difference is how targeting, messaging, and patient content are handled.
Here’s what that looks like in practice:
Organic search doesn’t rely on personal data or tracking individual users, which makes it one of the more controlled ways to drive patient acquisition.
Communication is structured so patient-related data isn’t misused or exposed, with clear limits on what’s included and how it’s sent.
Paid campaigns focus on intent and search behavior, not assumptions about a patient’s condition or identity. Targeting is kept broad enough to avoid exposing sensitive information.
Campaigns avoid tracking or targeting users based on visits to condition-specific or treatment pages, which can reveal health-related information.
Reviews are publicly shared by patients on their own. Testimonials are selected and used by the practice, which means they require clear, documented consent.
When patient experiences are used in marketing, they’re handled with proper permissions and clear boundaries on what can be shared.
You can still market effectively, but it has to be done with control and intent.
Walk through your current campaigns and content with our team at Artgro, and let’s identify where adjustments are needed to keep everything compliant.

There are areas in healthcare marketing where pushing harder creates risk. Those are the areas we don’t touch, and that’s intentional. Here’s what that means in practice:
These boundaries are what allow your marketing to run without creating unnecessary exposure.
After all, clear boundaries build trust.
Review your current setup today and make sure nothing is being done in a way that puts your practice at risk.
Not by default. It’s best to understand that standard setups can collect data that may be considered PHI, which creates risk. It needs to be configured carefully or replaced with a setup designed for healthcare use.
Yes, but targeting and tracking need to be handled carefully. Retargeting based on sensitive pages or conditions can cross into compliance issues if not set up correctly.
Email can be used, but it depends on what data is included and how it’s handled. Messages that involve patient information require a compliant setup and safeguards.
If a platform handles patient data, a Business Associate Agreement is required. Many standard marketing tools don’t offer this, which is where setups often run into problems.
No – there’s no such thing as HIPAA certification. Here at Artgro, we focus on how marketing systems are configured to align with HIPAA, and recommend working with your compliance officer or legal team for broader requirements.
Marketing setups in healthcare often rely on tools and tracking that weren’t built for patient data. That’s where problems start. Today, book a consultation with our experts at Artgro, and let’s review your current setup in detail so nothing gets missed.