OCR Encourages Healthcare Organizations to Conduct a Gap Analysis
In its April 2018 cybersecurity newsletter, OCR draws attention to the benefits of performing a gap analysis in addition to a risk analysis. The latter is required to identify risks and vulnerabilities that could potentially be exploited to gain access to ePHI, while a gap analysis helps healthcare organizations and their business associates determine the extent to which they are compliant with specific elements of the HIPAA Security Rule. The Risk Analysis HIPAA requires covered entities and their business associates to perform a comprehensive, organization-wide risk analysis to identify all potential risks to the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of ePHI – 45 CFR § 164.308(a)(1)(ii)(A). If a risk analysis is not performed, healthcare organizations cannot be certain that all potential vulnerabilities have been identified. Vulnerabilities would likely remain that could be exploited by threat actors to gain access to ePHI. While HIPAA does not specify the methodology that should be used when conducting risk analyses, OCR explained in its newsletter that risk...
Study Reveals Healthcare Industry Employees Struggling to Understand Data Security Risks
The recently published Beyond the Phish Report from Wombat Security, now a division of Proofpoint, has revealed healthcare employees have a lack of understanding of common security threats. For the report, Wombat Security compiled data from nearly 85 million questions and answers posed to customers’ end users across 12 categories and 16 industries. Respondents were asked about security best practices that would help them avoid ransomware attacks, malware installations, and phishing attacks and established the level of expertise at protecting confidential information, defending against email and web-based scams, securing mobile devices, working safely in remote locations, identifying physical risks, disposing of sensitive information securely, using strong passwords, and safe use of social media and the web. Overall, the healthcare industry performed second worst for security awareness, just ahead of the hospitality industry, with the survey highlighting several areas of weakness that could potentially be exploited by cybercriminals to gain access to healthcare networks and...
Employee Sent PHI After Being Fired
A bizarre mistake by the Texas Health and Human Services Commission has seen a former employee sent the protected health information of approximately 100 patients after she had been fired. She was sent boxes containing items that had been collected from her old desk, but was also sent a box of benefits application forms. After Tracy Ryans, 51, of Houston, was terminated, HHSC mailed her two boxes containing her personal items, which were left on her porch by the delivery driver. One of the boxes contained personal belongings that included pens, a coffee cup, and old shoes. The other box contained paperwork. Ryans told the Texas Tribune that one of the boxes contained personal items that did not belong to her. They had been taken from a desk she shared with coworkers. The other box was full of paperwork containing highly sensitive personal information of clients. The paperwork included benefits applications that included the Social Security numbers, billing statements, copies of driver’s licenses, and check stubs relating to approximately 100 individuals. The documents were dated...
How to Defend Against Insider Threats in Healthcare
One of the biggest data security challenges is how to defend against insider threats in healthcare. Insiders are responsible for more healthcare data breaches than hackers, making the industry unique. Verizon’s Protected Health Information Data Breach Report highlights the extent of the problem. The report shows 58% of all healthcare data breaches and security incidents are the result of insiders. Healthcare organizations also struggle to detect insider breaches, with many breaches going undetected for months or even years. One healthcare employee at a Massachusetts hospital was discovered to have been accessing healthcare records without authorization for 14 years before the privacy violations were detected, during which time the records of more than 1,000 patients had been viewed. Healthcare organizations must not only take steps to reduce the potential for insider breaches, they should also implement technological solutions, policies, and procedures that allow breaches to be detected rapidly when they do occur. What are Insider Threats? Before explaining how healthcare...
85,000 Patients Impacted by California Ransomware Attack
Center for Orthopaedic Specialists is notifying its patients that some of their protected health information was potentially accessed by unauthorized individuals who installed ransomware on its network. The attack impacts all current and former patients of three of its facilities in West Hills, Simi Valley and Westlake Village in California. According to Databreaches.net, 85,000 patients have potentially been impacted. Center for Orthopaedic Specialists was notified by its IT vendor that an unauthorized individual began attempting to access its network on February 18, 2018. Access to the network was gained and ransomware was installed, which was used to encrypt a wide range of files, many of which contained the protected health information of patients. The types of information encrypted by the ransomware included names, details about medical records, dates of birth, and Social Security numbers. Prompt action was taken by the IT vendor to limit the harm caused and the affected system was taken offline rapidly to prevent any exfiltration of data. An investigation into the breach has...



