Double Burglary Sees Connecticut Patients’ PHI Exposed
SouthWest Community Health Center, a Bridgeport, CT network of health centers, has alerted patients that some of their protected health information has been exposed after burglars targeted two of its facilities. Several computers were stolen in a double burglary at its 1046 Fairfield Avenue and 10 Clinton Avenue sites. Thieves first broke into the Fairfield Avenue facility on Saturday 8, April and stole four desktop computers and a laptop. The following weekend, the Clinton Avenue health center was broken into and two laptop computers were stolen. Both facilities had security alarms which were triggered when the offices were entered. Law enforcement responded immediately in both cases, but the perpetrators had fled the scene. The burglaries were not believed to have been conducted in order to gain access to patients’ protected health information, only for the value of the computer hardware that was stolen. However, it is possible that the thieves or other unauthorized individuals were able to view the information stored on the devices. The data stored locally on the devices were...
Reducing the Impact of Healthcare-Focused WannaCry-Style Ransomware Attacks
by Sean Masters, Worldwide Programs Manager, Services & Support, Zerto Starting with a major attack on the UK’s National Health Service (NHS) several weeks ago, the WannaCry ransomware attack has now spread to more than 150 countries, producing tens of thousands of infections and causing worldwide data havoc. Healthcare organizations like the NHS are often prime ransomware targets, because the hackers behind the attacks know that healthcare data is among the most crucial of data types. They take advantage of this fact in the most vicious way possible. In fact, according to a 2016 Ponemon Institute report, 79 percent of healthcare organizations say they were hit with two or more data breaches in the past two years. This number is especially striking when you consider that data attacks on hospitals literally put lives at stake. Yet so many healthcare organizations, evidenced by the damages of the WannaCry attacks, are not prepared to address and recover from a disaster when it strikes. In today’s data-reliant environment, if your recovery times are being measured in days or even...
OCR Issues Guidance on the Correct Response to a Cyberattack
Last week, the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights issued new guidance to covered entities on the correct response to a cyberattack. OCR issued a quick response checklist and accompanying infographic to explain the correct response to a cyberattack and the sequence of actions that should be taken. Responding to an ePHI Breach Preparation is key. Organizations must have response and mitigation procedures in place and contingency plans should exist that can be implemented immediately following the discovery a cyberattack, malware or ransomware attack. The first stage of the response is to take immediate action to prevent any impermissible disclosure of electronic protected health information. In the case of a network intrusion, unauthorized access to the network – and data – must be blocked and steps taken to prevent data from being exfiltrated. Healthcare organizations may have staff capable of responding to such an incident, although third party firms can be contracted to assist with the response. Smaller healthcare organizations may have little choice...
Data Breach Risk From Out of Date Operating Systems and Web Browsers Quantified
The recent WannaCry ransomware attacks have highlighted the risks from failing to apply patches and update software promptly. BitSight has now published the results of a study that sought to quantify the risk from tardy updates and delayed software upgrades. For the study, BitSight analyzed the correlation between data breaches and the continued to use old operating systems such as Windows 7, Windows Vista and Windows XP and old versions of web browsers. Operating systems and browsers used by approximately 35,000 companies from 20 industries were assessed as part of the study. BitSight checked Apple OS and Microsoft Windows operating systems and Chrome, Internet Explorer, Safari, and Firefox web browsers. 2,000 of the companies studied (6%) had out of date operating systems on more than half of their computers. BitSight said 8,500 companies were discovered to be using out of date web browsers. BitSight used its risk platform to study computer compromises and identified operating system and browser versions at those companies. BitSight was able to determine that organizations...
Mississippi Division of Medicaid Announces Exposure of 5,220 Individuals’ PHI
The Mississippi Division of Medicaid (DOM) has announced that 5,220 Medicaid recipients have had some of their protected health information (PHI) exposed via email as a result of an error with an online form service. DOM discovered that the online form service was sending emails containing PHI to staff members, but those emails were not encrypted. The online service was used by staff members to create forms that were posted on its medicaid.ms.gov website. When a form was submitted via the website, emails containing the form information were sent to designated staff members. Once the emails were received they were securely stored; however, it is possible that the information contained in the emails could have been intercepted in transit and could have been accessed by unauthorized individuals. DOM stopped using the online service once the error was discovered and all forms were removed from the website. The service transmitted six different online forms. Those forms contained the following PHI elements: Names, addresses, phone numbers, dates of birth, email addresses, health insurer...



