Overdose Prevention and Patient Safety Act Passed by House
The Overdose Prevention and Patient Safety Act – H.R. 6082 – aims to ease restrictions on the sharing of health records of patients with addictions, aligning 42 CFR Part 2 – Confidentiality of Substance Use Disorder Patient Records – with HIPAA. Currently, 42 CFR Part 2 only permits the disclosure of health records of patients with substance abuse disorder without written consent to medical staff in emergency situations, to specified individuals for research and program evaluations, or if required to do so by means of a court order. Under current regulations, a special release form must be signed by a patient authorizing the inclusion of substance abuse disorder information in their medical record. Preventing doctors from having access to a patient’s entire medical history means decisions could be taken without full understanding of their potential consequences. If details of substance abuse disorder can be accessed, doctors will be able to make more informed decisions which will help them to safely and effectively treat patients. The Overdose Prevention and Patient Safety...
Common Rule Compliance Date Delayed Until January 2019
On June 19, 2018, the federal government published the final rule for the Federal Policy for the Protection of Human Subjects – The Common Rule. The aim of the Common Rule is to protect individuals who voluntarily participate in research, while also reducing the administrative and regulatory burdens for low-risk research. A revised Common Rule was due to take effect on January 19, 2018 with an effective compliance date on the same date. However, an interim final rule was published on January 17, 2018 delaying the effective date for six months – The new compliance date was due to be July 19, 2018. On April 20, 2018, a notice of proposed rulemaking was published seeking comments about whether the new Common Rule requirements should be delayed for a further six months. After assessing the comments received on the notice of proposed rulemaking, the proposals made in that NPRM have been adopted and the compliance date has now been extended until January 21, 2019. In the final rule it was noted, “We acknowledge that the timing of the interim final rule was not ideal and led to...
Advisory Issued After 8 Vulnerabilities Discovered in Natus Xltek NeuroWorks Software
ICS-CERT has issued an advisory following the discovery of eight vulnerabilities in version 8 of Natus Xltek NeuroWorks software used in Natus Xltek EEG medical products. If the vulnerabilities are successfully exploited they could allow a malicious actor to crash a vulnerable device or trigger a buffer overflow condition that would allow remote code execution. All eight vulnerabilities have been assigned a CVSS v3 score above 7.0 and are rated high. Three of the vulnerabilities – tracked as CVE-2017-2853, CVE-2017-2868, and CVE-2017-2869 – have been assigned a CVSS v3 base score of 10, the highest possible score. CVE-2017-2867 has been assigned a base score of 9.0, with the other four vulnerabilities – CVE-2017-2852, CVE-2017-2858, CVE-2017-2860, and CVE-2017-2861 – given a rating of 7.5. The vulnerabilities are a combination of stack-based buffer overflow and out-of-bounds read vulnerabilities. CVE-2017-2853 would allow an attacker to cause a buffer overflow by sending a specially crafted packet to an affected product while the product attempts to open a file requested by...
Washington Health System Suspends Several Employees for Inappropriate PHI Access
Following the alleged inappropriate accessing of patient health records by employees, Washington Health System has taken the decision to suspend several employees while the privacy breach is investigated. While it has not been confirmed how many employees have been suspended, Washington Health System VP of strategy and clinical services, Larry Pantuso, issued a statement to the Observer Reporter indicating around a dozen employees have been suspended, although at this stage, no employees have been fired for inappropriate medical record access. The privacy breaches are believed to relate to the death of an employee of the WHS Neighbor Health Center. Kimberly Dollard, 57, was killed when an out of control car driven by Chad Spence, 43, rammed into the building where she worked. Spence and one other individual were admitted to the hospital after sustaining injuries in the accident. Pantuso did not confirm that this was the incident that prompted the employees to access patients’ medical records, although he did confirm that the alleged inappropriate access related to a “high profile...
Florida Agency for Persons with Disabilities and Black River Medical Center Report Phishing Incidents
Two HIPAA-covered entities have recently disclosed they have been victims of phishing attacks that have potentially resulted in the exposure of patients’ protected health information (PHI). Further Phishing Attack Reported by Florida Agency for Persons with Disabilities The Florida Agency for Persons with Disabilities (FAPD), which provides support services for people with disabilities such as autism, cerebral palsy, spina bifida, and Downs syndrome, has experienced another phishing attack The phishing attack occurred on April 10, 2018 and was limited to a single email account; however, that account contained the PHI of 1,951 customers or guardians. While no evidence was uncovered to suggest any PHI was viewed or copied by the attacker, PHI access could not be ruled out with 100% certainty. The compromised email account contained information such as names, birth dates, addresses, telephone numbers, health information, and Social Security numbers. All patients have now been notified of the breach and have been offered credit monitoring services for a year without charge....



