Austin Medical Center Discovers Patient Data Was Accessible Via Internet
An Austin, TX medical center has discovered patient data has been stolen and uploaded to the Internet and was accessible for 4 years. The information, which related to approximately 2,000 patients, could freely be found via search engines. Victory Medical Center was alerted to the data leak on April 5, 2017 by a patient who had found his or her personal information online while browsing the Internet. An investigation was launched by Victory Medical which revealed a paper based report containing patient information had been uploaded to Github by an unauthorized individual. The data was taken and uploaded without the knowledge or authorization by Victory Medical. The company says the breach was likely the work of a ‘lone bad actor’. The date of the breach is not known, although it is likely the incident occurred on or after June 10, 2013 according to the substitute breach notice uploaded to the Victory Medical website. The report had been generated from Victory Medical’s secure patient record system, although it did not include any medical information. The types of information...
ONC Announces Winners of Move Data Forward and Privacy Policy Snapshot Challenges
The HHS’ Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) has announced the winners of its Privacy Policy Snapshot Challenge. Participants in the challenge were required to develop a Model Privacy Notice (MPN) generator capable of generating customizable MPNs for healthIT developers. While resources are available to help HIPAA covered entities, many technology companies are not subject to HIPAA requirements. It was therefore important for a resource to be developed for those businesses to help them adhere to other federal regulations. While a MPN had already been released by ONC in 2011, since then the range of digital health technologies has increased considerably. One MPN would not be suitable for all organizations that collect consumer information. On March 1, 2016, ONC issued a request for information to find out more from the public about the practices that should be disclosed to consumers and how that information should be presented. The challenge to develop a MPN generator was issued in December 2016, with participants leveraging an updated MPN that...
VA Chooses Cerner to Provide Replacement for VistA EHR
The U.S. Department of Veteran Affairs (VA) has selected Cerner Corp., to provide a replacement for the outdated self-developed VistA EHR system. Earlier this year, United States Secretary of Veterans Affairs David Shulkin said a decision needed to be made about the VA EHR system, suggesting an off-the-shelf EHR system was the best choice and that a final decision would be made by July 1. Shulkin said, “Seamless care is fundamentally constrained by ever-changing information sharing standards, separate chains of command, complex governance, separate implementation schedules that must be coordinated to accommodate those changes from separate program offices that have separate funding appropriations, and a host of related complexities requiring constant lifecycle maintenance.” The cost of continued development of VistA was considered to be too great, especially with the prospect of ongoing interoperability problems. The VA has already invested hundreds of millions of dollars into VistA, yet the EHR is still only semi-interoperable with the system used by the Department of Defense...
WannaCry Ransomware Continues to Cause Problems for U.S. Hospitals
The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has issued a cyber notice to alert healthcare organizations of the continuing problems caused by the WannaCry ransomware attacks on May 12, 2017. Following the attacks, the United States Department of Homeland Security (DHS) issued a statement saying the U.S. had suffered ‘limited attacks’ with only a small number of companies affected. However, the problems caused by those attacks have been considerable. The HHS says two large, multi-state hospital systems are still facing significant challenges to operations as a result of the May 12 attacks. The Windows SMB vulnerability (MS17-010) exploited by the threat actors was addressed by Microsoft in a March 14, 2017 update, with an emergency patch released for unsupported Windows versions shortly after the attacks took place. The patches will prevent the MS17-010 vulnerability from being exploited and thus prevent WannaCry from being downloaded. The encryption routine used by the WannaCry malware was deactivated quickly following the discovery of a kill switch. While the encryption...
North Dakota Department of Human Services Notifies 2,452 Medicaid Recipients of PHI Exposure
The North Dakota Department of Human Services (NDDHS) is alerting 2,452 Medicaid recipients that some of their protected health information has been exposed. NDDHS discovered documents containing PHI had been disposed of in a dumpster accessible by the public. The HIPAA breach was discovered on May 19, 2017 when a member of the public saw documents containing sensitive information in a dumpster. The citizen contacted NDDHS about the discovery and an investigation was immediately launched. NDDHS arranged to collect the documents the same day. The documents were Medicaid worksheets dated 2015. The worksheets did not contain Social Security numbers, financial information or Medicaid recipients’ addresses; however, detailed on the sheets were Medicaid recipients’ first and last names, the first two characters of their Medicaid provider name, Medicaid provider numbers, Medicaid ID numbers, a two-digit code representing the county of residence, an internal NDDHS ID number, dates of service, amounts covered by insurance, amounts billed and allowed, diagnosis codes, coding modifiers and...



