Theft of Unencrypted Laptop Exposes Wonderful Health & Wellness Patients’ ePHI
Los Angeles-based Wonderful Health and Wellness has notified patents that their electronic protected health information (ePHI) was exposed in early December, 2016 when an unencrypted laptop computer was stolen from the company’s Wonderful Center for Health Innovation. Staff at the Center discovered the laptop computer was missing on December 12 when they returned to work after the weekend, with the theft having occurred at some point between December 9 and 12. The theft was immediately reported to law enforcement, although the device has not been recovered. The laptop contained a range of protected health information including patients’ names along with their home addresses, telephone numbers, dates of birth, email addresses, clinical account numbers, medical conditions, treatment information, treatment dates, and test results. No Social Security numbers or financial information were stored on the device. While the laptop computer was not encrypted, software had been installed which allows data on the device to be remotely deleted, although only if the laptop is used to connect to...
Court of Appeals Rules Horizon BCBS Class Action Has Standing Without Evidence of ID Theft
The United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit has ruled that a class action lawsuit filed by customers of Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield whose protected health information was exposed when two laptop computers were stolen from its New Jersey offices does have standing, even without proof of harm. The case had previously been dismissed by U.S. District Judge Claire Cecchi. The incident which led to the lawsuit occurred between November 1 and 3, 2013. Two unencrypted laptop computers containing the personal information of 839,000 plan members were stolen from Horizon BCBS’s headquarters in Newark, NJ. Stored on the laptops were names, addresses, birth dates, Social Security numbers, medical histories, demographic data, lab test results, insurance information, and other care-related data. Four plaintiffs – Courtney Diana, Karen Pekelney, Mark Meisel, and Mitchell Rindner – are named on the lawsuit, which was filed on behalf of themselves and other customers whose personal information was exposed. The complainants maintain that the laptop computers were targeted...
CoPilot Provider Support Services Alerts 220,000 Patients to Historic ePHI Incident
An unauthorized individual has accessed and downloaded the highly sensitive information of approximately 220,000 osteoarthritis patients from a website database maintained by CoPilot Provider Support Services. The website is used by physicians to determine whether ORTHOVISC® and MONOVISC® injections are covered by patients’ health insurance. The information entered via the website is added to a database maintained by CoPilot. That database was downloaded by an unauthorized individual, although according to a breach notice issued by CoPilot, the database was not accessible to the general public at any point. While not explicitly stated in the breach notice, the wording suggests that the individual responsible for the breach was a former employee. CoPilot believes it identified the person responsible and details of its investigation were passed to law enforcement. CoPilot reports that the law enforcement investigation confirmed CoPilot’s conclusions to be correct. While it is possible that data were accessed and downloaded with malicious intent, CoPilot does not believe the...
NIST Publishes Draft of Updated Cybersecurity Framework
It has been almost three years since the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) published its Cybersecurity Framework. This week, NIST published a new draft – the first since the Framework was published in 2014 – which includes a number of tweaks, clarifications, and additions. However, as NIST points out, the new draft contains relatively minor updates. The Framework has not received a complete overhaul. According to Matt Barrett, NIST’s program manager for the Cybersecurity Framework, “We wrote this update to refine and enhance the original document and to make it easier to use.” The new version incorporates feedback received following the December request for comments on how the framework is being used for risk management, the sharing of best practices, long term management of the Framework, and the relative value of different elements of the Framework. The Cybersecurity Framework was originally intended to be used for critical infrastructure to safeguard information assets, although its adoption has been much wider. The Framework is now being used by a wide...
Hacking Group Attempts to Extort Funds from Cancer Services Provider
TheDarkOverlord has struck again, this time the victim was a small Indiana cancer charity. The attack occurred on January 11 and was accompanied with a 50 Bitcoin ($43,000) ransom demand. Little Red Door Cancer Services of East Central Indiana was threatened with the publication of confidential data if the ransom was not paid. The charitable organization provides a range of services to help victims of cancer live normal lives during treatment, recovery, and at end of life. Little Red Door provides an invaluable service to cancer patients in East Central Indiana, with its limited funds carefully spent to provide the maximum benefit to cancer patients and their families. The payment of a $43,000 ransom would have had a significant impact on the good work the organization does, and would have taken funding away from the people who need it most. Little Red Door followed the advice of the FBI and refused to pay. Little Red Door spokesperson, Aimee Fant, issued a statement saying the organization “will not pay a ransom when all funds raised must instead go to serving families, all stage...



