5 Year Jail Term Upheld for Clinic Worker Who Stole PHI
A clinic worker who stole the protected health information of mentally ill patients and sold the data to identity thieves has failed to get his 5-year jail term reduced. Jean Baptiste Alvarez, 43, of Aldan, PA, stole daily census sheets from the Kirkbride Center, a 267-bed behavioral health care facility in Philadelphia. The census sheets contained all the information needed to steal the identities of patients and submit fraudulent tax returns in their names – Names, Social Security numbers, dates of birth and other personally identifiable information. Alvarez had the opportunity to steal the data undetected, as the floor where the sheets were kept did not have security cameras. Alvarez was paid $1,000 per census sheet by his to-co-conspirators, who used the information to submit 164 fraudulent tax returns in the names of the patients, resulting in a loss of $232,612 in tax revenue for the IRS. In early 2016, Alvarez was found guilty of conspiracy to defraud, misuse of Social Security numbers, and aggravated identity theft. The latter carried a minimum sentence of 2 years. The...
Ursnif Trojan Steals Contacts and Sends Spear Phishing Emails
The banking Trojan Ursnif, one of the most commonly used banking Trojans, has previously been used to attack financial institutions. However, it would appear the actors behind the malware have broadened their horizons, with attacks now being conducted on a wide range of organizations across many different industries, including healthcare. The new version of the Ursnif Trojan was detected by researchers at security firm Barkly. The malware arrived in a phishing email that appeared to have been sent in response to a message sent to another organization. The spear phishing email included the message thread from past conversations, suggesting the email account of the contact had been compromised. The email contained a Word document as an attachment with the message “Morning, Please see attached and confirm.” While such a message would arouse suspicion if that was the only content in the email body, the inclusion of the message thread added legitimacy to the email. The document contained a malicious macro that ran Powershell commands which tried to download the malicious payload;...
President Trump Nominates Alex Azar for HHS Secretary
Former Deputy Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, Alex Azar, is tipped to take over from former Secretary Tom Price after receiving the presidential nomination for the role. Azar previously served as general counsel to the HHS and Deputy Secretary during the George W. Bush administration. President Trump confirmed on Twitter that he believes Azar is the man for the job, tweeting “Happy to announce, I am nominating Alex Azar to be the next HHS Secretary. He will be a star for better healthcare and lower drug prices!” The position of Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services was vacated by former Secretary Tom Price in September, following revelations about his controversial use of military aircraft and expensive charter flights to travel around the country. While there were several potential candidates tipped to receive the nomination, including commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, Scott Gottlieb, and administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, Seema Verma, President Trump has made a controversial choice. Alex...
In What Year Was HIPAA Passed into Legislature?
The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act or HIPAA was passed into legislature on August 21, 1996, when Bill Clinton added his signature to the bill. Initially, the purpose of HIPAA was to improve portability and continuity of health insurance coverage, especially for employees that were between jobs. HIPAA also standardized amounts that could be saved in pre-tax medical savings accounts, prohibited tax-deduction of interest on life insurance loans, enforced group health plan requirements, simplified the administration of healthcare with standard codes and practices, and introduced measures to prevent healthcare fraud. Many of the details of the five titles of HIPAA took some time to be developed, and several years passed before HIPAA Rules became enforceable. The HIPAA Enforcement Rule, which allows the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights to impose financial penalties for noncompliance with HIPAA Rules, was not passed until February 16, 2006 – A decade after HIPAA was first introduced. There have been several important dates in the past...
MongoDB and AWS Incorporate New Security Controls to Prevent Data Breaches
Amazon has announced that new safeguards have been incorporated into its cloud server that will make it much harder for users to misconfigure their S3 buckets and accidentally leave their data unsecured. While Amazon will sign a business associate agreement with HIPAA-covered entities, and has implemented appropriate controls to ensure data can be stored securely, but user errors can all too easily lead to data exposure and breaches. Those breaches show that even HIPAA-compliant cloud services have potential to leak data. This year has seen many organizations accidentally leave their S3 data exposed online, including several healthcare organizations. Two such breaches were reported by Accenture and Patient Home Monitoring. Accenture was using four unsecured cloud-based storage servers that stored more than 137 GB of data including 40,000 plain-text passwords. The Patient Home Monitoring AWS S3 misconfiguration resulted in the exposure of 150,000 patients’ PHI. In response to multiple breaches, Amazon has announced that new safeguards have been implemented to alert users to exposed...



