Following an evaluation of the (ISC)² certification portfolio, (ISC)² has determined that HCISPP no longer meets the criteria to remain a (ISC)² certification program. Given this decision, the HCISPP certification program will be discontinued and will be designated an inactive credential effective three years from the date of the final exam: December 1, 2026
You can learn more at https://www.isc2.org/notice/HCISPP-Sunset
If you were considering the HCISPP as a certification, you may still proceed with your exam until December 1, 2023.
However, we recommend either the entry-level Certified in Cybersecurity certification or the Healthcare Certificates as an alternative.
ISC2 recently renaming the Certified Authorization Profession (CAP) certification to Certified Governance, Risk, and Compliance (CGRC) and changing some of the focus away from FISMA and towards GRC. Don't get me wrong, I've held the CAP since 2008 when it was known as the Certification and Accreditation Profession (CAP) but it's gotten almost zero respect outside of a small Government FISMA community. Honestly, after 30-years, I left the Defense/Government community and I've met exactly zero (0) CAPs in the public sector. I was afraid this would disappear long-ago. Personally, I think it will now better complete with, or compliment, the CRISC certification. We shall see.
You mentioned CISSP Concentrations - I think the problem with them is there is no CBK that can be purchased. For CISSP, CCSP, SSCP and others we have study materials readily available. With the Concentrations there is no path to them other than heavy NIST/ISO/PMBOK reads. Spending 2.6k on an official class is too big of an entry. I'd study for ISSEP if they updated the CBK or released a study guide.
ISC2 suffers from many certifications not having a maintained printed study guide and CBK.