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...
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...
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...
Medicaid Billing Company Settles Data Breach Case with Mass. Attorney General for $100,000
A data breach experienced by New Hampshire-based Multi-State Billing Services (MBS) has resulted in a $100,000 settlement with the Massachusetts attorney general’s office. MBS is a Medicaid billing company that provides processing services for 13 public school districts in Massachusetts – Ashburnham-Westminster Regional, Bourne, Foxboro Regional Charter, Milford, Nauset Public Schools, Norfolk, Northborough-Southborough Regional, Plainville, Sutton, Truro, Uxbridge, Wareham, and Whitman-Hanson Regional. In 2014, MBS learned that a password-protected, unencrypted laptop computer containing the sensitive personal information of Medicaid recipients had been stolen from a company employee. Data stored on the device included names, Social Security numbers, Medicaid numbers, and birth dates. As a result of the laptop theft, more than 2,600 Massachusetts children had their sensitive information exposed. Following the data breach, MBS notified all affected individuals and offered to reimburse costs related to security freezes for three years following the breach. Security was also...
70% of Healthcare Organizations Have Adopted Off-Premises Computing
A recent survey of 144 U.S-based healthcare organizations has shown the majority have already adopted off-premises computing for applications and IT infrastructure. The popularity of off-premises solutions is growing steadily. The KLAS Research study revealed 70% of healthcare organizations have moved at least some of their applications and IT infrastructure to the cloud. Out of the organizations that have, almost 60% are using a cloud or hosting environment for EHR applications. 69% of healthcare organizations said they would consider utilizing off-premises cloud solutions, or are actively expanding the use of those solutions. Cerner is the leader in off-premises computing for EHR applications, although Epic is attracting considerable interest, with many of its customers considering switching from its on-premises solutions to its data center. One of the fastest growing areas is Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) as it enables healthcare organizations to leverage off-premise infrastructure rather than having to build a data center. Amazon leads the way in this area and is the...



