Guide to a compliance gap assessment

Alisa Lewis (alisa.m.lewis@hotmail.com) is Director, Privacy and Compliance, at Diameter Health, Farmington, Connecticut.

Would you be surprised if I told you we perform gap assessments in our daily lives? Take, for example, meal planning. You determine what you are going to eat for the week, identify the ingredients you will need, find out which of the ingredients you have already, make a list of the additional ingredients needed, and then go grocery shopping.

A gap assessment (or gap analysis) is a comparison between the current state and the desired state. The difference between the current state and desired state are the gaps. Once gaps have been identified, they should be documented, shared with management and appropriate stakeholders, and remediated by the appropriate personnel.

In the meal-planning example, the desired state is having all the recipe ingredients you need to make your meals for the week. The current state is the ingredients you already have in your home. The gaps are the ingredients you need to make the meals but you do not have on hand. The documentation of the gaps is the grocery list. And the remediation takes place when you buy the missing ingredients at the grocery store.

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