Unencrypted Portable Devices are a HIPAA Breach Waiting to Happen
This week, OCR announced a new settlement with a covered entity to resolve HIPAA violations discovered during the investigation of an impermissible disclosure of ePHI. The incident that sparked the investigation was the theft of an unencrypted laptop computer from the vehicle of a CardioNet employee. This week has also seen two data breaches reported that have similarly involved the theft of portable devices. Earlier this week, Lifespan announced that a MacBook had been left in an employee’s vehicle from where it was stolen. The device was not encrypted and neither protected with a password. ePHI was accessible via the employee’s email account. More than 20,000 patients’ ePHI was potentially compromised. The second incident involved a flash drive rather than a laptop. Western Health Screening (WHS), a Billings, MT-based provider of on-site blood screening services, announced that patients’ names, phone numbers, addresses and some Social Security numbers have been exposed. The data on the drive related to individuals who had undergone blood screening tests between 2008 and 2012. A...
Lifespan Laptop Theft Exposes ePHI of 20,000 Patients
Lifespan has announced a laptop computer has been stolen from the vehicle of one of its employees. A thief stole a number of items from the employee’s car on February 25, 2017, including a MacBook laptop that contained the electronic protected health information of certain Lifespan patients. An investigation into the incident revealed the laptop was not encrypted, and neither was a password required to gain access to the device. Consequently, ePHI contained in the employee’s email account could potentially have been accessed and viewed. An analysis of the email account confirmed that no financial information, Social Security numbers, medical records, or medical diagnoses were exposed, although emails did contain patients’ names, partial addresses, medical record numbers, demographic information, and details of prescriptions. Lifespan took prompt action to secure the email account by changing the employee’s login credentials. While the data stored on the device could have been accessed, the investigation into the incident has not uncovered any evidence to suggest that any...
Wireless Health Services Provider Settles HIPAA Violations with OCR for $2.5 Million
2016 was a record year for HIPAA settlements, but 2017 is looking like it will see last year’s record smashed. There have already been six HIPAA settlements announced so far this year, and hot on the heels of the $31,000 settlement announced last week comes another major HIPAA fine. A $2.5 million settlement has been agreed with CardioNet to resolve potential HIPAA violations. CardioNet is a Pennsylvania-based provider of remote mobile monitoring and rapid response services to patients at risk for cardiac arrhythmias. Settlements have previously been agreed upon with healthcare providers, health plans, and business associates of covered entities, but this is the first time OCR has settled potential HIPAA violations with a wireless health services provider. While OCR has not previously fined a wireless health services provider for violating HIPAA Rules, the same cannot be said of the violations discovered. Numerous settlements have previously been agreed upon with covered entities after OCR discovered risk analysis and risk management failures. In this case, the settlement relates...
68% of Healthcare Employees Would Share Regulated Data
The Dell End User Security Survey has revealed that sensitive information, including data covered by HIPAA Rules, would be shared by employees without authorization under certain circumstances. The Dell End User Security Survey sought to uncover how widespread the unauthorized sharing of confidential information has become. The results show that even in heavily regulated industries such as healthcare, unauthorized data sharing is occurring. The survey was conducted on 2,608 individuals whose job duties involve handling confidential information. Across all industries, an alarming 72% of employees said they would willingly share sensitive information. 68% of healthcare employees who took part in the survey also confirmed that they would share PHI without authorization under certain circumstances. Dell explains that in most cases, unauthorized sharing of confidential data is not malicious. It occurs when employees are trying to be more efficient and work as effectively as possible. Unfortunately, however, in an effort to get more work completed in less time, those employees are taking...
Patient Records Must be Disclosed by Organ Procurement Organization, Rules Supreme Court Judge
A New York Supreme Court Judge has recently ruled that patient records held by the New York Organ Donor Network must be turned over to a plaintiff and that the request cannot be denied based on HIPAA. Patrick McMahon claims he was fired from his position of Transplant Coordinator by the New York Organ Donor Network following complaints he made about organ harvesting from four patients who were still showing clear signs of life and had not been declared legally dead. The New York Organ Donor Network maintains the plaintiff was fired for poor performance while he was still a probationary employee. The allegations about the procurement of organs have been denied. McMahon requested the New York Organ Donor Network turn over the medical records of the four patients as they are ‘material and necessary’ to show the patients showed signs of brain activity at the time the organs were harvested. The New York Organ Donor Network had previously denied McMahon’s request, instead providing contact details of the patients’ next of kin, informing McMahon that he needed to obtain consent forms...



