Children’s Hospital Los Angeles Alerts Parents to Impermissible Disclosure of Children’s PHI
Children’s Hospital Los Angeles is notifying parents of a privacy breach that saw the protected health information (PHI) of children disclosed to incorrect insurance payors. The privacy breach was discovered on November 29, 2017, with notifications sent to affected patients on December 19. The impermissible disclosure of PHI included names, addresses, medical record numbers, birth dates, dates of service, and descriptions of the services provided. Upon discovery of the privacy breach, the insurance payors were contacted and instructed to delete the information. Satisfactory assurances have been received that the information has now been deleted and the medical records of affected patients have been updated to include correct payor information. No reports have been received to suggest any of the disclosed information has been used inappropriately; however, out of an abundance of caution, affected patients have been offered credit monitoring/protection services with ID Experts without charge. In the breach notification letters, parents have been advised to monitor insurance...
Phishing Attack on Colorado Mental Health Institute Sees PHI Exposed
The Colorado Mental Health Institute at Pueblo has discovered one of its employees has fallen for a phishing scam that potentially allowed the attacker to gain access to the protected health information of as many as 650 patients. The Colorado Mental Health Institute at Pueblo is a 449-bed hospital providing inpatient care for patients. The hospital serves patients with pending criminal charges that require competency evaluations, individuals found by the courts to be incompetent to proceed, and individuals found not guilty of crimes due to insanity. The phishing attack occurred on November 1, 2017. The employee inadvertently disclosed login credentials that allowed the attacker to gain access to a state-issued computer. Unauthorized activity on the computer was detected the following day and access to the device was promptly blocked. The forensic investigation did not uncover any evidence to suggest the protected health information of patients had been accessed or stolen, although the possibility of unauthorized access and data theft could not be ruled out with complete certainty....
New Bill Aims to Change HIPAA Rules for Healthcare Clearinghouses
A new bill (H.R. 4613) has been introduced to the U.S House of Representatives by Congresswoman Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-Washington) that proposes changes to the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act and HIPAA Rules for healthcare clearinghouses. The Ensuring Patient Access to Healthcare Records Act of 2017 is intended to modernize the role of healthcare clearinghouses in healthcare, promote access to and the leveraging of health information, and enhance treatment, quality improvement, research, public health and other functions. Healthcare clearinghouses are entities that transform data from one format to another, converting non-standard data to standard data elements or vice versa. Healthcare clearinghouses are considered HIPAA-covered entities, although in some cases they can be business associates. The bill – Ensuring Patient Access to Healthcare Records Act of 2017 – would see all healthcare clearinghouses treated as covered entities. Healthcare clearinghouses gather health data from a wide range of sources, therefore they...
Access to Dental Records Lost for 5 Days Due to Ransomware
A dental practice in Reno, NV has experienced a ransomware attack that prevented dental records and images from being accessed for five days. Wager Evans Dental experienced the ransomware attack on October 30, 2017. The malicious software was installed on one computer and one server used by the practice. Ransomware can be installed in a number of ways, although most commonly attacks occur via email. That appears to be the case with this attack, with the practice suspecting ransomware was downloaded when an employee clicked on a malicious hyperlink or email attachment. IT staff and other experts were able to restore the encrypted files and remove the ransomware, although the process took five days. Access to patient records and images was not regained until November 4. The files encrypted by the ransomware contained sensitive information such as names, dates of birth, addresses, diagnoses, treatment plans, images, health insurance information, and Social Security numbers. A comprehensive investigation of the attack was conducted and while it is possible that data could have been...
Cybersecurity Best Practices for Travelling Healthcare Professionals
In its December cybersecurity newsletter, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights (OCR) offered cybersecurity best practices for travelling healthcare professionals to help them prevent malware infections and the exposure of patients’ protected health information (PHI). Many healthcare professionals will be travelling to see their families over the holidays and will be taking work-issued devices with them on their travels, which increases the risk to the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of PHI. Using work-issued laptops, tablets, and mobile phones in the office or at home offers some protection from cyberattacks and malware infections. Using the devices to connect to the Internet at cafes, coffee shops, hotels, and other Wi-Fi access points increases the risk of a malware infection or man-in-the-middle attack. Even charging portable devices via public USB charging points at hotels and airports can see malware transferred. Not only will malware and cyberattacks potentially result in data on the device being exposed, login credentials can...



