Spate of Phishing Attacks on Healthcare Organizations Sees 90,000 Records Exposed
The past few weeks have seen a significant rise in successful phishing attacks on healthcare organizations. In a little over four weeks there have been 10 major email hacking incidents reported to the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights, each of which has resulted in the exposure and potential theft of more than 500 healthcare records. Those ten incidents alone have seen almost 90,000 healthcare records compromised. Recent Email Hacking and Phishing Attacks on Healthcare Organizations HIPAA-Covered Entity Records Exposed Inogen Inc. 29,529 Knoxville Heart Group 15,995 USACS Management Group Ltd 15,552 UnityPoint Health 16,429 Texas Health Physicians Group 3,808 Scenic Bluffs Health Center 2,889 ATI Holdings LLC 1,776 Worldwide Insurance Services 1,692 Billings Clinic 949 Diagnostic Radiology & Imaging, LLC 800 The Oregon Clinic Undisclosed So far this year there have been three data breaches involving the hacking of email accounts that have exposed more than 30,000 records. Agency for Health Care Administration suffered a 30,000-record breach...
Tristar Medical Group Discovers Solution That Reduced its AWS Costs by 60%
Healthcare organizations are increasingly turning to the cloud to meet their IT needs, but while there are many advantages to be gained from migrating applications, infrastructure, and datacenter operations to the cloud, managing cloud costs remains a major challenge. Many healthcare organizations choose AWS EC2 instances for their servers. While the platform meets their needs, the high cost of running AWS EC2 instances – or equivalent instances from other providers – is forcing many healthcare organizations to scale back their cloud migration plans. The cost of running AWS EC2 instances can be considerable. Tristar Medical Group, the largest privately-owned healthcare provider in Australia, runs facilities across the country, spread across multiple time zones. Its clinics need access to servers around the clock and cloud instances were left running 24/7. Tristar soon discovered its strategy was proving prohibitively expensive. While the needs of its clinics were being met, the cost of its virtual desktop infrastructure (VDI) solution was unsustainable. The rising OpEx costs...
DoD IG Discovers Serious Flaws in Navy and Air Force EHR and Security Systems and Potential HIPAA Violations
A Department of Defense Inspector General (DoDIG) audit of the electronic health record (EHR) and security systems at the Defense Health Agency (DHA), Navy, and Air Force has uncovered serious security vulnerabilities that could potentially be exploited to gain access to systems and protected health information (PHI). This is the second DoDIG report from recent audits of military training facilities (MTFs). The first report revealed the DHA and Army had failed to consistently implement security protocols to safeguard EHRs and systems that stored, processed, or transmitted PHI. The latest report, which covers the DHA, Navy, and Air Force, has revealed serious vulnerabilities in 11 different areas. Inconsistency of implementing security protocols to protect EHRs and PHI, and the ineffective administrative, technical, and physical safeguards deployed constitute violations of Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) Rules. Those violations could attract financial penalties of up to $1.5 million per violation category. The DoDIG visited three Navy and two Air Force...
Class Action Lawsuit Claims UnityPoint Health Mislead Patients over Severity of Phishing Attack
A class action lawsuit has been filed in response to a data breach at UnityPoint Health that saw the protected health information (PHI) of 16,429 patients exposed and potentially obtained by unauthorized individuals. As with many other healthcare data breaches, PHI was exposed as a result of employees falling for phishing emails. UnityPoint Health discovered the security breach on February 15, 2018 and sent breach notification letters to affected patients two months later, on or around April 16, 2018. HIPAA-covered entities have up to 60 days following the discovery of a data breach to issue notifications to patients. Many healthcare organizations wait before issuing breach notifications and submitting reports of the incident to the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights. Waiting for two months to issue notifications to breach victims could be viewed as a violation of HIPAA Rules. While the maximum time limit for reporting was not exceeded, the HIPAA Breach Notification Rule requires notifications to be sent ‘without unnecessary delay.’ The HHS’ Office for...
Capital Digestive Care Notifies 17,639 Individuals of PHI Exposure
The Silver Spring, MD-based gastroenterology group Capital Digestive Care has discovered one of its business associates uploaded files to a commercial cloud server that lacked appropriate security controls, exposing the protected health information of up to 17,639 patients. The availability of sensitive patient data over the Internet was brought to the attention of Capital Digestive Care on February 23, 2018 and action was promptly taken to secure the files and prevent further unauthorized access. An investigation into the privacy breach was launched to determine the types of information that had been exposed and the number of patients impacted. The investigation confirmed some sensitive data had been exposed, although the breach was limited to individuals that had visited its website and submitted information via the Schedule a Visit and Contact pages on the site. The types of information exposed was limited to names, addresses, email addresses, telephone numbers, and birth dates. Patients may also have had a limited amount of health information exposed. The login page to the...



