Largest Healthcare Data Breaches of 2017
This article details the largest healthcare HIPAA compliance data breaches of 2017 and compares this year’s breach tally to the past two years, which were both record-breaking years for healthcare data breaches. 2015 was a particularly bad year for the healthcare industry, with some of the largest healthcare data breaches ever discovered. There was the massive data breach at Anthem Inc., the likes of which had never been seen before. 78.8 million healthcare records were compromised in that single cyberattack, and there were also two other healthcare data breaches involving 10 million or more records. 2015 was the worst ever year in terms of the number of healthcare records exposed or stolen. 2016 was a better year for the healthcare industry in terms of the number of healthcare records exposed in data breaches. There was no repeat of the mega data breaches of the previous year. Yet, the number of incidents increased significantly. 2016 was the worst ever year in terms of the number of breaches reported by HIPAA-covered entities and their business associates. So how have healthcare...
HHS Publishes Final Rule on Confidentiality of Substance Use Disorder Patient Records
The Department of Health and Human Services has published its final rule on the Confidentiality of Substance Use Disorder Patient Records, altering Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) regulations. The aim of the update is to better align regulations with advances in healthcare delivery in the United States, while ensuring patient’s privacy is protected when treatment for substance abuse disorders is sought. The final rule addresses the permitted uses and disclosures of patient identifying information for healthcare operations, payment, audits and evaluations. The last substantial changes to the Confidentiality of Alcohol and Drug Abuse Patient Records (42 CFR part 2) regulations were in 1987. In 2016, SAMHSA submitted a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking in the Federal Register proposing updates to 42 CFR part 2. The proposed updates reflected the development of integrated health care models and the use of electronic exchange of patient information, while still ensuring patient privacy was protected to prevent improper disclosures. After considering public...
OIG Finds Data Security Inadequacies at North Carolina State Medicaid Agency
The Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Inspector General (OIG) has published the findings of an audit of the North Carolina State Medicaid agency. The report shows the State agency has failed to implement sufficient controls to ensure the security of its Medicaid eligibility determination system and the security, integrity, and availability of Medicaid eligibility data. HHS oversees the administration of several federal programs, including Medicaid. Part of its oversight of the Medicaid program involves the auditing of State agencies to determine whether appropriate system security controls have been implemented and State agencies are complying with Federal requirements. The aim of the OIG audit was to determine whether adequate information system general controls had been implemented by the state of North Carolina to ensure its Medicaid eligibility determination system and data were secured. The Office of North Carolina Families Accessing Services Through Technology (NC FAST) was tasked with operating North Carolina’s Medicaid eligibility determination system. NC...
29,000 Patients Notified of Employee-Related Data Breach at SSM Health
The St. Louis, MO-based not-for-profit health system SSM Health has discovered a former employee has been accessing the health records of patients without any legitimate work reason for doing so for 8 months. The former employee worked in SSM Health’s customer service call center, and as such, did not have access to financial information, only demographic, health, and clinical information. The improper access was detected by SSM health on October 30, prompting a thorough investigation to determine the records that had been accessed and which patients were potentially at risk. The investigation revealed the records of patients in multiple states were accessed by the employee between February 13 and October 20, 2017. The employee was primarily interested in the records of patients of a primary care physician in the St. Louis area, specifically patients who had been prescribed a controlled substance. While that subset of patients was relatively small, it was not possible to determine the full scope of the privacy breach, so SSM Health took the decision to notify all patients whose...
Colorado Practice Hacked Twice in a Week
A family and sports medicine practice in Colorado has discovered a hacker gained access to its systems and encrypted files with ransomware. Longs Peak Family Practice (LPFP) in Longmont CO, identified suspicious activity on its network on November 5, 2017 and took rapid action to secure its systems. However, before that was possible, the attacker ran ransomware code which encrypted files on certain parts of its network. LPFP was prepared for such attacks, and was able to recover the encrypted files and rebuild its systems from backups. However, five days after the initial intrusion was detected, LPFP discovered a second attack had occurred, and its systems had been accessed in a second attack. Ransomware was not involved in the second incident. While the first incident was dealt with internally, when the second attack was discovered, LPFP called in a leading computer forensics form to assist with the investigation, conduct scans for malware and backdoors, and ensure that unauthorized access to its systems was blocked. That investigation revealed that an unauthorized individual had...



