Deadline for Reporting 2017 HIPAA Data Breaches Approaches
The deadline for reporting 2017 HIPAA data breaches to the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights is fast approaching. HIPAA-covered entities have a maximum of 60 days from the discovery of a data breach to report security incidents to OCR and notify affected patients. Smaller breaches of PHI do not need to be reported to OCR within this time frame, instead covered entities can delay reporting those breaches to OCR until the end of the calendar year. The maximum allowable time for reporting breaches impacting fewer than 500 individuals is 60 days from the end of the year in which the breach was experienced. The final day for reporting 2017 HIPAA data breaches to OCR is therefore March 1, 2018. A HIPAA data breach is defined as an “acquisition, access, use, or disclosure” of unsecured protected health information (PHI) that is not permitted by the HIPAA Privacy Rule. Unsecured PHI is defined as PHI that is “not rendered unusable, unreadable, or indecipherable to unauthorized persons through the use of a technology or methodology,”...
Amazon Seeks HIPAA Expert for New Healthcare Venture
Amazon has posted a new job vacancy for a HIPAA Compliance Lead, confirming the retail giant is making a move into the healthcare sector. The HIPAA Compliance Lead will be responsible for creating a HIPAA compliance program to ensure its technology and business processes meet the terms of its BAA and the management of all aspects of that compliance program. The new recruit should have at least 5 years of HIPAA experience in an enterprise, experience with the FDA and 510(k) process, 7+ years’ experience in an information technology setting including exposure to software development/auditing, a thorough understanding of HIPAA/HITECH and OIG compliance standards, and experience with business intelligence and analytics tools. Applicants must also have an understanding of HIPAA privacy and security requirements, and how those standards map to ISO 27001, SOC 1/2/3, NIST 800-53. Amazon already offers its cloud platform – Amazon Web Services (AWS) – to healthcare organizations, with AWS supporting HIPAA compliance and Amazon prepared to sign a business associate agreement with...
67% of CISOs Expect a Cyberattack or Data Breach in 2018
The perceived risk of a cyberattack or data breach occurring has increased year on year, according to a new survey conducted by the Ponemon Institute. The Opus-sponsored survey was conducted on 612 CISOs, CIOs, and other information security professionals, who were asked questions about data security and cyber risk. The survey revealed confidence in cybersecurity defenses is getting worse, with more than 67% of respondents now believing they will experience a data breach or cyberattack in 2018. Last year, 60% of respondents thought they would likely experience a data breach or cyberattack in 2017. Hackers have been responsible for a large number of data breaches over the past 12 months and the threat from malware is greater than ever, but the biggest perceived data security risk comes from within. 70% of respondents said the most probable cause of a data breach was a lack of competent in-house staff, with 64% of respondents saying a lack of in-house expertise would likely result in a data breach. Cyberattacks and malware infections are likely causes of data breaches, but the...
HHS Sued by CIOX Health Over Unlawful HIPAA Regulations
The Department of Health and Human Services is being sued by CIOX Health, a medical record retrieval company, over updates to HIPAA laws that place restrictions on the amount that can be charged to patients for providing them with copies of their medical records. CIOX Health claims the HIPAA Omnibus Rule updates in 2013, “unlawfully, unreasonably, arbitrarily and capriciously,” restrict the fees that can be charged by providers and their business associates for providing copies of the health information stored on patients. Changes to HIPAA Rules not only placed a limit on the fees, but also expanded the types of information that must be provided to patients, on request. Accessing some of that information, in particular health information that is not stored in electronic medical records, is costly. Yet, even though the costs of processing some requests are high, HIPAA limits charges to $6.50 according to the lawsuit. CIOX Health argues that this flat rate fee is an arbitrary figure that bears no relation to the actual cost of honoring patient requests for copies of their...
1,300 Patients’ Medical Records Viewed Without Authorization by Palomar Health Nurse
More than 1,300 patients of Palomar Medical Center Escondido are being notified that a former nurse viewed their medical records without authorization while they were receiving treatment at the hospital. The privacy violations occurred over a 15-month period between February 10, 2016 and May 7, 2017. The unauthorized access was discovered when access logs were reviewed. The audit revealed a pattern of access that was not consistent with the nurse’s work duties. The audit showed the nurse had viewed the records of patients that had been assigned to her, in addition to patients assigned to another nurse in the same unit. The incident appears to be a case of snooping, rather than data access with malicious intent. Palomar Health has uncovered no evidence to suggest any information was recorded and removed from the hospital, and no reports have been received to suggest any patient information has been misused. Following an internal investigation into the privacy violations, the nurse resigned. The information viewed was limited to names, dates of birth, genders, medical record numbers,...



