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The HIPAA Journal is the leading provider of HIPAA training, news, regulatory updates, and independent compliance advice.

Steve Alder

Steve Alder is the editor-in-chief of The HIPAA Journal. Steve is responsible for editorial policy regarding the topics covered in The HIPAA Journal. He is a specialist on healthcare industry legal and regulatory affairs, and has 10 years of experience writing about HIPAA and other related legal topics. Steve has developed a deep understanding of regulatory issues surrounding the use of information technology in the healthcare industry and has written hundreds of articles on HIPAA-related topics. Steve shapes the editorial policy of The HIPAA Journal, ensuring its comprehensive coverage of critical topics. Steve Alder is considered an authority in the healthcare industry on HIPAA. The HIPAA Journal has evolved into the leading independent authority on HIPAA under Steve’s editorial leadership. Steve manages a team of writers and is responsible for the factual and legal accuracy of all content published on The HIPAA Journal. Steve holds a Bachelor’s of Science degree from the University of Liverpool. You can connect with Steve via LinkedIn or email via stevealder(at)hipaajournal.com

6,600 Patients Discover PHI Has Been Exposed

NYU Langone Health System has discovered a binder containing a log of presurgical insurance authorizations was accidentally recycled by a cleaning company in October. The binder contained records relating to around 2,000 patients. Information in the binder included names, birth dates, dates of service, current procedural terminology code, diagnosis codes, insurer names, and insurance ID numbers. In some cases, brief notes may have been present, along with insurance approvals/denials and inpatient/outpatient status. No Social Security numbers were recorded in the paperwork, and neither any financial information. As required by HIPAA, NYU Langone Health System had implemented a policy that requires all PHI to be disposed of securely when it is no longer required, typically by shredding documents. Since the binder was taken for recycling by accident, that did not occur. Since insurance ID numbers were present in the logs, NYU Langone Health System has offered all affected patients complimentary identity theft protection services and cyber monitoring services through ID Experts for one...

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Study Reveals Cybersecurity in Healthcare is Not Being Taken Seriously Enough

A recent survey by Black Book Research indicates the healthcare industry is not doing enough to tackle the threat of cyberattacks, and that cybersecurity is still not being taken seriously enough. The survey was conducted on 323 strategic decision makers at U.S. healthcare firms in Q4, 2017. Even though the threat of cyberattacks is greater than ever, and the healthcare industry will remain the number one target for cybercriminals in 2018, only 11% of healthcare organizations plan to appoint a cybersecurity officer in 2018 to take charge of security. Currently 84% of provider organizations do not have a dedicated leader for cybersecurity. Payer organizations are taking cybersecurity more seriously. 31% have appointed a manager for their cybersecurity programs and 44% said they would make an appointment next year. Overall, 15% of all surveyed organizations said they have a chief information security office in charge of cybersecurity. The survey also revealed that cybersecurity best practices are not being widely adopted in the healthcare industry. Even though HIPAA calls for regular...

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More than 1,000 Lexmark Printers Open to Attack Due to Misconfiguration

Researchers at NewSky Security have discovered more than a thousand Lexmark printers have been misconfigured by users and are accessible over the Internet. Many of the printers are used businesses, universities, and even the U.S. Government, yet they can be accessed via the Internet without the need for a password. The lack of security means unauthorized individuals can connect to the printers, which in some cases are connected to sensitive networks. Attacking those printers requires no skill and is a quick and easy process. Any individual can remotely access and take full control of the device. It would be possible for anyone to set a password for the printer, add a backdoor and capture print jobs. NewSky Security says the lack of an administrator password is gross negligence by users. The researchers identified the misconfigured Lexmark printers by performing a search on the search engine Shodan. Of the 1,475 unique IPs found, 1,123 printers had no security at all and only 24% redirected the researchers to a login page. The researchers explained, “an attacker can take control of...

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OCR Launches New Tools to Help Address the Opioid Crisis
Dec19

OCR Launches New Tools to Help Address the Opioid Crisis

OCR has launched new tools and initiatives as part of its efforts to help address the opioid crisis in the U.S., and fulfil its obligations under the 21st Century Cures Act. Two new webpages have been released – one for consumers and one for healthcare professionals – that make information relating to mental/behavioral health and HIPAA more easily accessible. OCR resources have been reorganized to make the HHS website more user-friendly, and the new webpages serve as a one-stop resource explaining when, and under what circumstances, health information can be shared with friends, families, and loved ones to help them deal with, and prevent, emergency situations such as an opioid overdose or a mental health crisis. OCR has also released new guidance on sharing information related to substance abuse disorder and mental health with individuals involved in the provision of care to patients. The new resources include fact sheets, decision charts, an infographic, and various scenarios that address the sharing of information when an individual has an opioid overdose.  Some of the materials...

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AHIMA Issues Guidance to Help Healthcare Organizations Develop an Effective Cybersecurity Plan

The American Health Management Association (AHIMA) has published guidance to help healthcare organizations develop a comprehensive and effective cybersecurity plan. In the guidance, AHIMA explains that healthcare organizations must develop, implement and maintain an organization-wide framework for managing information through its entire lifecycle, from its creation to its safe and secure disposal – Termed information governance (IG). As the Protenus/Databreaches.net monthly healthcare data breach reports show, healthcare data breaches are now occurring at a rate of more than one a day. With the threat of attack greater than ever before, it is essential that healthcare organizations develop an IG program. Kathy Downing, Vice President, Information Governance, Informatics, Privacy and Security at AHIMA, explains that IG is now critical in an environment where cyberattacks are being experienced by healthcare organizations every day. Downing cites the June 2017 report from the Healthcare Industry Cybersecurity Taskforce (HCIC), which states “Information governance includes not just IT...

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