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The HIPAA Journal is the leading provider of HIPAA training, news, regulatory updates, and independent compliance advice.

Steve Alder

Steve Alder is the editor-in-chief of The HIPAA Journal. Steve is responsible for editorial policy regarding the topics covered in The HIPAA Journal. He is a specialist on healthcare industry legal and regulatory affairs, and has 10 years of experience writing about HIPAA and other related legal topics. Steve has developed a deep understanding of regulatory issues surrounding the use of information technology in the healthcare industry and has written hundreds of articles on HIPAA-related topics. Steve shapes the editorial policy of The HIPAA Journal, ensuring its comprehensive coverage of critical topics. Steve Alder is considered an authority in the healthcare industry on HIPAA. The HIPAA Journal has evolved into the leading independent authority on HIPAA under Steve’s editorial leadership. Steve manages a team of writers and is responsible for the factual and legal accuracy of all content published on The HIPAA Journal. Steve holds a Bachelor’s of Science degree from the University of Liverpool. You can connect with Steve via LinkedIn or email via stevealder(at)hipaajournal.com

Flowers Hospital Proposes $150,000 Settlement for 2014 Data Breach

A class action lawsuit filed in the wake of an employee-related data breach at Flowers Hospital in Dothan, Alabama in 2014 is heading towards being settled. The settlement has yet to receive final court approval, although approval seems likely and a resolution to this four-year legal battle is now in sight. In contrast to most class action lawsuits filed over the exposure/theft of PHI, this case involved the theft of data by an insider rather than a hacker. Further, the former employee used PHI for identity theft and fraud and was convicted of those crimes. The breach in question involved a former lab technician, Kamarian D. Millender, who was found in possession of paper records containing patients protected health information. Millender admitted to using the information for identity theft and for filing false tax returns in victims’ names. In December 2014, Millender was sentenced to serve two years in jail. In the class action lawsuit, filed the same year, it was claimed that between June 2013 and December 2014, paper records were left unprotected and unguarded at the hospital...

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Blue Springs Family Care Ransomware Attack Impacts 45,000 Patients

Blue Springs Family Care in Missouri has experienced a ransomware attack that has resulted in the encryption of sensitive data. The attack was detected by the healthcare provider’s computer vendor on May 12, 2018.  An investigation was launched the same day by the computer vendor with assistance provided by a contracted third-party computer forensics firm. In contrast to many ransomware attacks which involve a single ransomware variant being downloaded and blind file encryption, the attacker managed to gain access to Blue Springs Family Care systems and installed a variety of malicious software programs in addition to the ransomware. Those malware programs would have given the attacker full access to all Blue Springs Family Care computer systems, including access to all patients protected health information. At the time of issuing notifications to patients, Blue Springs Family Care had not received any reports to suggest that any PHI was stolen and misused by the attacker. However, data access and data theft could not be ruled out. The types of information potentially accessed...

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Bill Proposes 18 Months Free Credit Monitoring Services for Data Breach Victims in Massachusetts

A new bill has been introduced in Massachusetts that seeks to improve protections for consumers affected by data breaches. The bill calls for free credit monitoring services to offered to individuals whose personal information was exposed in a security breach. The bill (H.4806) was filed on Tuesday by a House-Senate conference committee chaired by Rep. Tackey Chan and Sen. Barbara L’Italien and is a compromise bill between competing data security bills that were sent to the committee on May 3. The House Bill required consumers to be provided with a year of credit monitoring services following a data breach whereas the Senate bill required consumers to be provided with 2 years of credit monitoring services following a data breach. The conference committee bill takes the middle ground, requiring 18 months of credit monitoring services to be provided to consumers free of charge following a standard security breach. However, a data breach at a credit monitoring company (Equifax, Experian, TransUnion) would require affected consumers to be provided with 42 weeks of credit...

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Boys Town National Research Hospital and NorthStar Anesthesia Discover PHI Compromised in Phishing Attacks

The phishing attacks on healthcare organizations continue… The past few days have seen two further healthcare organizations announce that email accounts were breached when employees responded to phishing emails. Email Account Compromised at Boys Town National Research Hospital Boys Town National Research Hospital (Boys Town), an Omaha, NE hospital specializing in pediatric deafness, visual and communication disorders, has announced that a recent phishing campaign has resulted in the email account of an employee being accessed by an unauthorized individual. The email account contained the protected health information of 105,309 patients Boys Town first became aware of a security breach on May 23, 2018 when unusual email account activity was detected. Computer forensics experts were called in to investigate and a breach was confirmed to have occurred on May 23. Boys Town painstakingly examined the account email-by-email to determine which patients potentially had their PHI exposed and the amount of PHI that was potentially compromised. The breach was confirmed as being confined to a...

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Golden Heart Administrative Professionals Ransomware Attack Impacts 44,600 Patients

Golden Heart Administrative Professionals, a Fairbanks, AK-based billing company and business associate of several healthcare providers in Alaska, is notifying 44,600 individuals that some of their protected health information has potentially been accessed by unauthorized individuals as a result of a recent ransomware attack. The ransomware was downloaded to a server containing the PHI of patients. According to a press release issued by the company, “All client patient information must assume to be compromised.” Local and federal law enforcement agencies have been notified about the cyberattack and efforts are continuing to recover files. The Golden Heart Administrative Professionals ransomware attack is the largest data breach reported by a healthcare organization in July, and the second major data breach to be reported by an Alaska-based healthcare organization in July. In early July, the Alaska Department of Health and Social Services announced that it had suffered a data breach as a result of a malware infection. The Zeus/Zbot Trojan – an information stealer – had...

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