HHS Files Motion to Dismiss Ciox Health Lawsuit
The Department of Health and Human Services has filed a motion to dismiss a lawsuit filed by the healthcare information management company Ciox Health claiming the lawsuit lacks standing. Early this year, Ciox Health filed a lawsuit challenging changes to HIPAA in 2013 and subsequent enforcement guidance issued by the HHS in 2016. The changes to the HIPAA Privacy Rule in 2013 in question placed a limit on the amount that could be charged by covered entities for providing patients with copies of their health records. The charges must be limited to a reasonable cost-based fee. In 2016, the HHS issued guidance for the public explaining the rulemaking and providing answers to commonly asked questions about medical record access. Ciox Health claims the changes threaten to upend the medical records industry and that the updates and guidance are ultra vires, arbitrary and capricious. Ciox Health is also seeking injunctive relief to stop the HHS from unlawfully enforcing the regulations. In its motion to dismiss the lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., HHS...
Lack of Security Awareness Training Leaves Healthcare Organizations Exposed to Cyberattacks
A recent study conducted by the Ponemon Institute on behalf of Merlin International has revealed healthcare organizations are failing to provide sufficient security awareness training to their employees, which is hampering efforts to improve their security posture. Phishing is a major security threat and the healthcare industry is being heavily targeted. Phishing offers threat actors an easy way to bypass healthcare organizations’ security defenses. Threat actors are now using sophisticated tactics to evade detection by security solutions and get their emails delivered. Social engineering techniques are used to fool employees into responding to phishing emails and disclose their login credentials or install malware. Phishing is used in a high percentage of cyberattacks on healthcare organizations. Research conducted by Cofense (formerly PhishMe) suggests as many as 91% of cyberattacks start with a phishing email. While security solutions can be implemented to block the majority of phishing emails from being delivered to end users’ inboxes, it is not possible to block 100% of...
Chesapeake Regional Healthcare Reports PHI of 2,100 Patients Was Stored on Lost Hard Drives
Body: Chesapeake Regional Healthcare has discovered two hard drives containing the protected health information (PHI) of approximately 2,100 patients are missing from the Chesapeake Regional Medical Center campus in Chesapeake, Virginia. The data stored on the devices relates to individuals who took part in studies at its Sleep Center between April 2015 and February 2018. It is currently unclear exactly when the hard drives went missing. Chesapeake Regional Healthcare discovered the devices were missing on February 6, 2018. An internal investigation was launched, and a full search of the facility was conducted, but the devices could not be located. The missing hard drives have been reported as lost/stolen to law enforcement, but Chesapeake Regional Healthcare said the probability of the devices being recovered is low and it does not expect the devices to be found. The hard drives were not encrypted. If obtained by a third party, the protected health information of patients could potentially be accessed. The types of information stored on the devices includes names, demographic...
Study Reveals Poor Patching Practices in Healthcare
A recent survey conducted by the Ponemon Institute on behalf of ServiceNow has revealed the healthcare and pharmaceutical industries are struggling to keep on top of patching. Vulnerabilities are not being patched promptly leaving organizations open to attack. The survey was conducted on 3,000 security professionals from organizations with more than 1,000 employees across a broad range of industry sectors and countries. The results of the survey were published in the report: Today’s State of Vulnerability Response: Patch Work Demands Attention. The report revealed 57% of respondents had experienced at least one data breach where access to the network was gained by exploiting a vulnerability for which a patch had previously been released. A third of respondents said that they were aware that the vulnerability existed and a patch was available prior to the breach. More alarming was two third of organizations did not know they were vulnerable to attack. Even though there is a considerable risk of vulnerabilities being exploited, 37% of respondents said they do not scan for...
Oregon Data Breach Notification and Information Security Laws Updated
Oregon has updated its data breach notification law to improve protections for state residents whose personal information is exposed in a data breach. State governor Kate Brown added her signature to Senate Bill (SB 1551) last month, which updates several regulations, notably Oregon’s Breach Notification Law, O.R.S. 646A.604 and Information Security Law, O.R.S. 646A.622. The updates will become effective in June 2018. Prior to the update, Oregon data breach notification law only applied to persons who own or license personal information. Now, the definition of a person is “an individual, private or public corporation, partnership, cooperative, association, estate, limited liability company, organization or other entity, whether or not organized to operate at a profit, or a public body as defined in ORS 174.109.” A data breach is defined as “an unauthorized acquisition of computerized data that materially compromises the security, confidentiality or integrity of personal information that a person maintains.” The definition of personal information has been expanded to include a first...



