This blog is brought to you by our friends at North Shore Computer, a healthcare-focused IT services company with decades of experience helping medical practices like dermatology groups strengthen their IT foundations. They provide network infrastructure setup, HIPAA compliance support, proactive security monitoring, endpoint management, licensing tracking, and real-time data protection. As a family-run business, North Shore Computer is known for its customer-first approach, long-term employee relationships, and reputation as a trusted healthcare IT partner across the country.
Dr. Patel’s dermatology clinic was known for its care, not its speed. Her team—front-desk lead Maria, medical assistant Jordan, and nurse practitioner Eli—did everything they could to keep the day moving. But it was an uphill battle.
Maria would try to check in a patient, only to watch the screen freeze mid-click. Jordan stood by helplessly while before-and-after procedure photos took forever to upload. Eli found himself restarting the EHR multiple times a day, sometimes while a patient sat waiting. Every glitch stole time and energy. Everyone blamed the software. Quiet frustration turned into stress that seeped into the patient experience.
Then came the turning point. After a particularly chaotic Monday morning that included an internet outage, three frozen charts, and one almost-lost image file, Dr. Patel brought in an IT partner who understood the unique demands of a dermatology practice.
In just a few weeks, the change was noticeable. The new partner replaced outdated equipment, encrypted every device, set up cloud-based backups, and added proactive monitoring to catch problems early. No more guesswork. No more crossed fingers.
Now, Maria checks patients in without delay. Jordan captures images that upload instantly. Eli finishes notes before lunch. Dr. Patel sees more patients each day, with less stress and fewer disruptions. The systems don’t just work, they work for the people using them.
The difference? It wasn’t some magical quick fix, just the right foundation with a trusted, knowledgeable IT partner.
Dermatology practices face unique IT demands. Imaging-heavy workflows mean storing and accessing terabytes of photos. Providers move quickly between rooms using laptops, tablets, and desktops. If even one part of the system slows down, it creates ripple effects across the entire patient flow.
Compounding the challenge, many practices rely on old routers, underpowered networks, or piecemeal IT fixes. Even worse, 60% of small practices lack formal data backup plans, leaving them vulnerable to data loss and HIPAA violations. Without the right IT foundation, a dermatology practice can be one slow upload or one phishing email away from major disruption.
Here are five essential best practices every dermatology practice should adopt:
From front desk computers to provider laptops, encryption ensures that if a device is lost or stolen, patient data stays protected.
Adding a second layer of login security — like a text code or authenticator app — protects systems even if passwords are compromised.
Even non-technical team members need to know how to spot phishing emails, handle devices securely, and avoid risky behaviors. Aim for at least annual training.
Unpatched systems are vulnerable. Automating security updates closes gaps before they can be exploited — without creating extra work for your team.
Don’t rely on local drives alone. Cloud backups provide a safety net that ensures you can recover critical data quickly if something goes wrong.
Not all IT vendors understand the unique regulatory landscape of healthcare. When evaluating partners, look for these qualities:
A: At least once a year. For new hires, training should happen during onboarding. You might also consider short refreshers or phishing simulations regularly to reinforce good habits.
A: Start by assessing your backups. Ensure you have secure, encrypted, off-site (cloud) backups that are tested regularly. From there, focus on device encryption and MFA.
A: Yes. Remote IT support can handle 99% of issues without needing someone onsite. For the rare times you need hands-on help, your IT partner can coordinate local resources.
A: Even the best EHR will lag if your network or hardware can’t keep up. Issues like unstable internet, outdated routers, or insufficient bandwidth often cause the slowdowns users blame on software.
A: Frequent system crashes, slow image uploads, delayed logins, or staff complaints about lag are all signs. A formal security assessment can help uncover hidden gaps and recommend the right upgrades.