Timothy Noonan Becomes OCR’s Top HIPAA Enforcer, Replacing Deputy Director Iliana Peters
After just 4 months in the position of deputy director for health information privacy at the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights, Iliana Peters has departed for the private sector. Peters took over as deputy director following the departure of acting deputy director Deven McGraw in November, only to leave the post on February 2 to join the healthcare team at law firm Polsinelli. This is the third major change of staff at the Department of Health and Human Services in a little over four months. First, there was the departure of HHS Secretary Tom Price in late September, McGraw left in October to join health tech startup Citizen, and now Iliana Peters has similarly quit for the private sector. Peters has been working at the Office for Civil Rights for the past 12 years, including 5 years as a senior advisor. During her time at OCR Peters has worked closely with regional offices helping them enforce HIPAA Rules and has been instrumental in building up OCR’s HIPAA enforcement program. Peters has trained regional OCR staff on HIPAA enforcement and the...
How Many HIPAA Violations in 2017 Resulted in Financial Penalties?
We are often asked about healthcare data breaches and HIPAA violations and two of the most recent questions are how many HIPAA violations in 2017 resulted in data breaches and how many HIPAA violations occurred in 2017. How Many HIPAA Violations Occurred in 2017? The problem with determining how many HIPAA violations occurred in 2017 is many violations are not reported, and out of those that are, it is only the HIPAA breaches that impact more than 500 individuals that are published by the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights on its breach portal – often incorrectly referred to as the “Wall of Shame”. To call it a ‘Wall of Shame’ is not fair on healthcare organizations because the breach reports show organizations that have experienced data breaches, NOT organizations that have violated HIPAA Rules. Even organizations with multi-million-dollar cybersecurity budgets, mature security defenses, and advanced employee security awareness training programs can experience data breaches. All it takes if for a patch not to be applied immediately or an employee to...
Ron’s Pharmacy Services Notifies Patients of Email Account Breach
San Diego, CA-based Ron’s Pharmacy Services has discovered an email account containing limited protected health information has been compromised by an unknown individual. Suspicious activity was identified on an employee’s email account on October 3, 2017 prompting an investigation; however, it was not until December 21, 2017 that it was determined that an unauthorized individual had accessed messages in the email account containing patient information. An analysis of the emails in the account showed only a limited amount of PHI was compromised: Names, internal account numbers, and payment adjustment information, while a small number of patients also had details of their prescription medications compromised. While PHI access was confirmed, Ron’s Pharmacy is unaware of any misuse of patient information. Ron’s Pharmacy has now notified patients about the breach and reported the incident to the appropriate authorities. In its Feb 2 substitute breach notice, Ron’s Pharmacy explained that rapid action was taken to secure the account and prevent further access. Login credentials were...
Aetna Seeks At Least $20 Million in Damages from Firm Responsible for HIV Status Data Breach
Aetna has taken legal action against an administrative support company over a July 2017 data breach that saw details of HIV medications visible through the clear plastic windows of envelopes in a mailing. Letters inside some of the envelopes had slipped, making the words ““when filling prescriptions for HIV medications” clearly visible to anyone who saw the envelopes. The privacy breach was condemned by the Legal Action Center and AIDS Law Project of Pennsylvania, who along with Berger & Montague, P.C., filed a class action lawsuit against Aetna seeking damages for breach victims. In January, Aetna settled the lawsuit for $17.16 million. Last month, Aetna also settled violations of HIPAA and state laws for $1.15 million with the New York attorney general over the same breach. The class action was only one of seven filed against the health insurer, and further fines from state attorneys general are to be expected. Several other attorneys general have opened investigations into the breach and may also determine that state laws have been violated. The costs associated with the...
24,000 Decatur County General Hospital Patients Notified About Malware-Related Data Breach
Decatur County General Hospital in Tennessee has discovered malware has been installed on a server housing its electronic medical record system. The attacker potentially gained access to the medical records of up to 24,000 patients. An unauthorized software installation was discovered on November 27, 2017 by the hospital’s medical record system vendor, which is also responsible for maintaining the server on which the system is installed. An investigation revealed the software was a form of malware known as a cryptocurrency miner. Crytptocurrency mining is the use of computer processors to verify cryptocurrency transactions and add them to the public ledger containing details of all transactions since the currency was created. The process of verifying transactions requires computers to solve complex computational problems. Cryptocurrency mining can be performed by anyone with a computer, and in return for solving those computational problems, the miner is rewarded with a small payment for verifying the transaction. A single computer can be used to earn a few dollars a day performing...



