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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

Vulnerabilities in Fax Machines Can Be Exploited to Gain Network Access and Exfiltrate Sensitive Data

Despite many alternative communication methods being available, healthcare organizations still extensively use faxes to communicate. Some estimates suggest as many as 75% of all communications occur via fax in the healthcare industry. While fax machines would not rank highly on any list of possible attack vectors, new research shows that flaws in the fax protocol could be exploited to launch attacks on businesses and gain network access. The flaws were detected by researchers at Check Point who successfully exploited them to create a backdoor into a network which was used to steal information through the fax. The researchers believe there are tens of millions of vulnerable fax machines are currently in use around the world. To exploit the flaw, the researchers sent a specially crafted image file through the phone line to a target fax machine. The fax machine decoded the image and uploaded it to the memory and the researchers’ script triggered a buffer overflow condition that allowed remote code execution. The researchers were able to gain full control of the fax machine and, using...

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Lawmakers Accuse Oklahoma Department of Veteran Affairs of Violating HIPAA Rules
Aug13

Lawmakers Accuse Oklahoma Department of Veteran Affairs of Violating HIPAA Rules

The Oklahoma Department of Veteran Affairs has been accused of violating Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) Rules by three Democrat lawmakers, who have also called for two top Oklahoma VA officials to be fired over the incident. The alleged HIPAA violation occurred during a scheduled internet outage, during which VA medical aides were prevented from gaining access to veterans’ medical records. The outage had potential to cause major disruption and prevent “hundreds” of veterans from being issued with their medications. To avoid this, the Oklahoma Department of Veteran Affairs allowed medical aides to access electronic medical records using their personal smartphones. In a letter to Oklahoma Governor Mary Fallin, Reps. Brian Renegar, Chuck Hoskin, and David Perryman called for the VA Executive Director Doug Elliot and the clinical compliance director Tina Williams to be fired over the alleged HIPAA violation. They claimed Elliot and Williams “have little regard for, and knowledge of, health care,” and allowing medical aides to access electronic medical...

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Arnot Health Reduces ER Door-to-Floor Times by 36% with QliqSOFT
Aug10

Arnot Health Reduces ER Door-to-Floor Times by 36% with QliqSOFT

Arnot Health has implemented a new communications solution that has improved communication efficiency, slashed the time it takes to transfer patients from the emergency room to new units, and has improved both the level of care provided to patients and staff satisfaction. Arnot Health runs a 475-bed health system in southern New York State and constantly evaluates the healthcare services it provides to patients and searches for new opportunities to improve patient care. One area where there was considerable room for improvement was the admissions process, especially in its emergency department. “The amount of time it was taking to align all the appropriate resources was causing delays, and nobody wants to sit in an ER longer than they need to,” said Mike Connor, director of business information systems at Arnot Health. “We recognized an opportunity in the admissions process to greatly improve patient and staff satisfaction by eliminating the old school way of handling admissions and embracing a more mobile approach.” While many patients can be treated in the...

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APWG Detects 46% Rise in Phishing Websites in Q1, 2018

The Anti-Phishing Working Group has released its Q1, 2018 Phishing Activity Trends Report which shows there was a substantial increase in unique phishing sites detected in the first few months of 2018 compared to the final quarter of 2017. The report explores phishing attacks and methods used between January 1 and March 31, 2018. In Q1, 263,538 unique phishing sites were identified – a 46% increase from the 180,577 unique sites identified in Q4, 2017 and a 38% increase from the 190,942 sites detected in Q3, 2017. There were 60,887 unique phishing sites detected in January 2018 which was on a par with December 2017, although a substantial increase in February (88,754) and a further major increase in March (113,897). The number of unique phishing campaigns reported by APWG customers remained broadly the same in January (89,250) and February (89,010) with a slight fall in March (84,444). 235 brands were spoofed in January, rising to 273 in February, and falling to 238 in March. APWG member MarkMonitor tracked the industry sectors that were most heavily targeted in phishing campaigns....

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MedSpring Urgent Care Breach Impacts 13,034 Patients

MedSpring Urgent Care, a network of urgent care clinics in Atlanta, Chicago, Austin, Dallas, Fort Worth, and Houston, has discovered an unauthorized individual has gained access to an email account as a result of an employee being duped by a phishing email. The email account was compromised on May 8, 2018 but the security breach was not detected until May 17. Upon discovery of the breach, the email account was secured to prevent further unauthorized access and a leading cybersecurity forensics firm was contracted to conduct an investigation into the breach and assist with the breach response. MedSpring discovered on May 22, 2018 that the attacker potentially gained access to the protected health information of patients through the emails and email attachments. The breach was limited to a single email account and no other systems were compromised. A full review of all messages in the account was conducted to determine which patients had been affected and the types of information that had been exposed. MedSpring says the breach was limited to patients who had previously visited its...

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