25% off all training courses Offer ends June 26, 2026
View HIPAA Courses
25% off all training courses
View HIPAA Courses
Offer ends June 26, 2026

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

Study Uncovers More Than 8,000 Security Flaws in Pacemakers from Four Major Manufacturers

Over the past 12 months, security vulnerabilities in implantable medical devices have attracted considerable attention due to the potential threat to patient safety. Last year, MedSec conducted an analysis of pacemaker systems which revealed security vulnerabilities in the Merlin@home transmitter and the associated implantable cardiac devices manufactured by St. Jude Medical. Those vulnerabilities could potentially be exploited to cause device batteries to drain prematurely and the devices to malfunction. A recent study of the pacemaker ecosystem has uncovered a plethora of security flaws in devices made by other major manufacturers. Those flaws could potentially be exploited to gain access to sensitive data and cause devices to malfunction. Billy Rios and Jonathan Butts, PhD., of security research firm WhiteScope has recently published a white paper detailing the findings of the study. The pair conducted an analysis of seven cardiac devices from four major device manufacturers. The researchers evaluated home monitoring devices, implantable cardiac devices and physician...

Read More
Molina Healthcare Patient Portal Discovered to Have Exposed Patient Data
May31

Molina Healthcare Patient Portal Discovered to Have Exposed Patient Data

Earlier this month, security researcher Brian Krebs was alerted to a flaw in a patient portal used by True Health Group that allowed patients’ test results to be viewed by other patients. While patients were required to login to the patient portal before viewing their test results, a security flaw allowed then to also view other patients’ results. Now, the Medicaid and Affordable Care Act Insurer Molina Healthcare is investigating a similar flaw in its patient portal that has allowed the sensitive medical information of patients to be accessed by unauthorized individuals. In the case of Molina Healthcare, patients’ medical claims could be accessed without authentication. Brian Krebs contacted Molina Healthcare to alert the company to the flaw. An investigation was conducted and its patient portal was shut down while the issue was resolved. It is unclear for how long the flaw existed, whether medical claims had been viewed by unauthorized individuals, and if so, how many patients had their privacy violated. Potentially, the flaw resulted in the exposure of all customers’ medical...

Read More
Children’s Mercy Hospital Discovers Unauthorized Website Exposed 5,500 Patients’ PHI
May31

Children’s Mercy Hospital Discovers Unauthorized Website Exposed 5,500 Patients’ PHI

A website created by a physician at Children’s Mercy Hospital in Kansas City, MO has recently been discovered to lack appropriate security protections, potentially allowing the protected health information of 5,511 patients to be viewed by unauthorized individuals. The physician created the website with good intentions and used the site as an educational resource. Data uploaded to the website was protected with a password to prevent unauthorized access. However, the protections in place to prevent unauthorized ePHI access did not meet the hospital’s security standards. The lack of security controls on the website meant information uploaded to the website could have been accessed by unauthorized individuals. Contact information (addresses and telephone numbers), Social Security numbers, financial information, health insurance details, photos and other images were not uploaded to the site. However, the website did contain information such as patients’ first and last names, gender, age, medical record number, encounter number, dates of service, admission and discharge dates,...

Read More

US-CERT: Patch Samba Now to Address Wormable Code Execution Bug

A worldwide cyberattack in a similar vein to the WannaCry ransomware attacks on Friday 12, May could be repeated using a different Windows Server Message Block vulnerability. US-CERT has issued a security alert about the SMB flaw advising organizations to apply a patch as soon as possible to fix the vulnerability. The vulnerability, which is being tracked as CVE-2017-2764, affects Samba 3.5.0 and later versions. Samba provides Windows-style file and print services for Linux and Unix servers and is based on the Windows SMB file-sharing protocol. US-CERT says the flaw is a remote code execution vulnerability that could be exploited by “a malicious client to upload a shared library to a writable share, and then cause the server to load and execute it.” If the flaw is exploited, an attacker could run arbitrary code with root-level permissions. Ars Technica says the flaw can only be exploited on un-patched computers if port 445 is open to the Internet and if a machine permits permanent write privileges from a shared file with a known or guessable server path. A patch has been issued to...

Read More
Beacon Health Employee Improperly Accessed 1,200 Patient Records Over 3 Year Period
May30

Beacon Health Employee Improperly Accessed 1,200 Patient Records Over 3 Year Period

A former Beacon Health System employee has been discovered to have accessed the medical records of approximately 1,200 patients without authorization over a period of three years. The privacy breach was uncovered during a routine audit of ePHI access logs, with the unauthorized access discovered on March 30, 2017. The employee in question was permitted to access patient records to perform work duties, although access rights were abused and the records of other patients were viewed even though there was no legitimate work reason for doing so. Upon discovery of the unauthorized access, Beacon Health conducted a full review with assistance from an external computer forensics firm and determined the inappropriate access started in March 2014. The employee was interviewed and claimed the records were accessed out of curiosity only and confirmed no information was copied or disclosed to other individuals. The medical records were accessed after patients visited the Emergency Room for treatment. The types of information in the records included patients’ names, ages, room numbers, chief...

Read More
x

Is Your Organization HIPAA Compliant?

Find Out With Our Free HIPAA Compliance Checklist

Get Free Checklist