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...
OCR Settlement Highlights Importance of Obtaining Signed Business Associate Agreements
The Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights has sent another warning to HIPAA-covered entities about the need to obtain signed, HIPAA-compliant business associate agreements with all vendors prior to disclosing any protected health information. Yesterday, OCR announced it has agreed to settle potential violations of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act with The Center for Children’s Digestive Health (CCDH); a small 7-center pediatric subspecialty practice based in Park Ridge, Illinois. On August 13, 2015, OCR conducted a HIPAA compliance review of CCDH following an investigation of FileFax Inc., which was contracted by CCDH to store inactive patient records. The FileFax investigation revealed the company had not signed a business associate agreement prior to being provided with patients’ PHI. The subsequent compliance review of CCDH similarly revealed that no signed business associate agreement existed. CCDH had therefore impermissibly disclosed patients’ PHI to FileFax in violation of HIPAA Rules. CCDH had provided paper records relating...
Cardiology Center of Acadiana Ransomware Attack Impacts 9,700 Patients
A recent Cardiology Center of Acadiana ransomware attack has resulted in the exposure of almost 9,700 patients’ protected health information. The ransomware attack occurred on February 7, 2017 and was discovered the following day. The attackers targeted a server used by the Lafayette, LA-based cardiology practice and deployed ransomware, which encrypted a range of files containing patients’ names, dates of birth, addresses, billing information, clinical data, medical images and social security numbers. Cardiology Center of Acadiana has not disclosed exactly how the attack occurred, nor the variant of ransomware used in the attack, although the breach report suggests the attackers utilized open external ports on the server. All external ports have now been closed to prevent future attacks and the cardiology center’s antivirus protections have been upgraded. Cardiology Center of Acadiana has not received any reports suggesting patients’ PHI has been copied or misused, although all patients impacted by the incident have been advised to exercise caution in case the attackers were able...
Employee Terminated for Improperly Dumping PHI
An employee of New Jersey-based BioReference Laboratories has been terminated for failing to follow company protocols – and HIPAA Rules – regarding the secure disposal of documents containing the protected health information of patients. BioReference Laboratories is the third largest full service clinical diagnostic laboratory in the United States, with locations in New York, New Jersey, Maryland, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Ohio, Florida, Texas and California. The incident occurred at its facilities in Florida. Company policies require all sensitive paperwork to be securely shredded prior to disposal, in accordance with HIPAA Rules. However, on March 14, 2017, BioReference Laboratories discovered that documents provided to the employee had been disposed of in a dumpster in Davenport, Florida. Upon discovery of the incident, BioReference Laboratories launched an investigation and identified the individual responsible. The decision was taken to terminate the employee for the HIPAA breach. BioReference Laboratories promptly arranged for the documents to be collected and securely...
Poor Security Awareness Greatest Threat to Healthcare Data Security
A recent survey conducted by HIMSS Analytics for the 2017 Level 3 Healthcare Security Study has shown that the biggest concern regarding healthcare data security is a lack of employee security awareness. The Level 3 Communications, Inc., sponsored survey was conducted on 125 healthcare IT executives and IT professionals, including directors, IT managers, IT security officers and other IT staff. The aim of the study was to provide insight into the main high level security concerns within the healthcare industry. The majority of respondents – 85% – said they had education programs that taught employees to be more security aware, although that was not enough to ease concerns. A lack of employee security awareness was the top-rated concern, with more than 78% of respondents saying employee security awareness was one of the main concerns regarding exposure to threats. Employees are considered the weakest link in the security chain and with good reason. As last month’s Healthcare Breach Barometer report from Protenus shows, insiders are the biggest cause of healthcare data...



