Protenus Releases November Healthcare Data Breach Report
Protenus has released its November healthcare data breach report – a summary of healthcare data breaches reported by HIPAA-covered entities. The report shows there has been a month on month fall in healthcare data breaches, and a major reduction in the number of records exposed by data breaches. November saw the lowest total of the year to date for breaches with 28 incidents included in the report – four incidents fewer than February, the previous best month when 32 breaches were reported. This is the second consecutive month when reported breaches have fallen. There were 46 breaches reported in September and 37 in October. November was also the best month of the year in terms of the number of records exposed. 83,925 individuals were impacted by healthcare data breaches in November. The previous lowest total was May, when 138,957 records were exposed. November was the third consecutive month where the number of breached records fell. While the November healthcare data breach report offers some good news, the fall in breaches and breached records should be taken with a large pinch...
New Malware Detections at Record High: Healthcare Most Targeted Industry
Throughout 2017, the volume of new malware samples detected by McAfee Labs has been steadily rising each quarter, reaching a record high in Q3 when 57.6 million new malware samples were detected. On average, in Q3 a new malware sample was detected every quarter of a second. In the United States, the healthcare industry continues to be the most targeted vertical, which along with the public sector accounted for more than 40% of total security incidents in Q3. In Q3, account hijacking was the main attack vector, followed by leaks, malware, DDoS, and other targeted attacks. There were similar findings from the recent HIMSS Analytics/Mimecast survey which showed email related phishing attacks were the greatest cause of concern among healthcare IT professionals, with email the leading attack vector. In Q3, globally there were 263 publicly disclosed security breaches – a 15% increase from last quarter – with more than 60% of those breaches occurring in the Americas. Malware attacks increased 10% since last quarter bringing the total new malware samples in the past four quarters to...
Almost 10,000 Patients Impacted by Nebraska Ransomware Attack
Columbus Surgery Center, LLC and Eye Physicians, P.C., in Columbus, Nebraska have experienced a ransomware attack that has potentially resulted in the protected health information of almost 10,000 patients being accessed by the attackers. The ransomware attack occurred on October 7, 2017 and saw a wide range of files on some servers being encrypted by the ransomware. A ransom demand was issued by the attackers, although it was not paid. The encrypted files were restored from a recent backup to allow services to be continued to be offered to patients. Third-party computer forensics professionals were called in to assist with the investigation of the attack to determine whether the attackers gained access to, viewed, or copied patient information and to investigate how access to the servers was gained and how the ransomware was installed. The investigation did not uncover evidence to suggest any patient health information was stolen, but data access could not be ruled out with a high degree of confidence. Consequently, the incident was reportable to the Department of Health and Human...
Potential Data Theft Incident Reported by Austin Manual Therapy
1,750 patients of Austin Manual Therapy (AMT) have been notified that some of their protected health information may have been accessed and stolen by a criminal attacker who gained access to AMT’s computer system. A forensic investigation by a leading national cybersecurity team revealed access was first gained on October 3, 2017 and continued until October 9, when the intrusion was detected and blocked. According to the breach notice posted on the AMT website, access was not gained to the company’s electronic medical record system. Only a limited portion of the network was accessed – one computer and a shared file system. While the forensic investigation confirmed that access to some files had been gained, it was not clear how much information was viewed and which, if any, documents had been stolen. An analysis of the file system and computer showed that the following information could have been accessed: Names, addresses, dates of birth, phone numbers, dates of service, charge amounts, occupations, insurance coverage and policy information, health screening information,...
1,900 MidMichigan Medical Center Patients Notified After Documents Found in the Street
MidMichigan Medical Center (MMC) in Alpena has alerted patients to a potential breach of their health information, which may have literally fallen into the hands of individuals unauthorized to view the information. On the evening of November 18, a MMC cardiologist removed patient files from the Alpena cardiology office without authorization. The files were transported to the cardiologist’s vehicle in a storage container, but the container had not been properly secured. Close to a parking lot near 12th Avenue/Chisholm Street, the container was dropped, spilling the contents on the ground. The documents were caught by the wind and started blowing round the street. Some of the documents were picked up by members of the public, who informed the hospital that documents containing sensitive patient information was blowing around the street. The hospital contacted law enforcement to provide assistance collecting the paperwork. Dr. Richard Bates, vice president of medical affairs at MMC issued a statement saying all of the paperwork is believed to have been retrieved, so the risk to...



