American Senior Communities Says 17,000 Employees Impacted by W-2 Scam
American Senior Communities, a nursing home chain based in central Indiana, has announced that one of its employees responded to a W-2 phishing email and sent the tax information of more than 17,000 employees to tax fraudsters. There have now been more than 70 organizations that have responded to W-2 Form phishing emails so far this year according to Databreaches.net, although the latest addition to the list is the largest confirmed breach of employee information to have occurred this year. The massive haul of W-2 Form data included employees’ names, Social Security numbers, birth dates, and addresses. An investigation suggests that the individual behind the campaign was based offshore. In many cases, organizations discover they have been scammed soon after the email has been sent, allowing rapid action to be taken to limit the harm caused. However, that was not the case here. The phishing email was sent to a payment processor for American Senior Communities in mid-January; however, the incident was not discovered for a month. The employee’s error was only identified on February 17...
Onsite HIPAA Audits Could Be Delayed by a Year
In an interview at HIMSS17 with the Information Security Media Group, Deven McGraw, Deputy Director of Health Information Privacy at the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights, explained that the Phase 2 HIPAA compliance audits are progressing, although the onsite audits of covered entities will be delayed. It is currently unclear how much of a delay there will be. The onsite audits were to immediately follow the 211 desk audits that were conducted last year, although the decision has been taken to push back the onsite audits until the reports of the desk audits have been written and analyzed. For the HIPAA compliance desk audits, covered entities and business associates of covered entities were sent notifications that they had been selected for audit. They were asked to supply a range of documentation on various aspects of their HIPAA compliance programs. The documentation has now been assessed and OCR is very close to issuing reports to the 166 covered entities that were audited. Those reports will be sent out in groups, with the first batch hopefully...
Horizon BCBS of New Jersey Pays $1.1 Million for HIPAA Violation
The New Jersey Division of Consumer Affairs recently announced that Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey (Horizon BCBSNJ) has agreed to pay a $1.1 million fine for failing to protect the electronic protected health information of almost 690,000 plan members. The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) requires covered entities to implement administrative, technical and physical safeguard to protect the ePHI of patients and health plan members. While data encryption is not mandatory technical safeguard, it is an addressable issue. Covered entities must therefore consider the use of encryption technologies to protect ePHI at rest and in motion. If data encryption is not chosen, alternative, security measures must be implemented that offer an equivalent level of protection. Covered entities are required to conduct a comprehensive risk analysis to identify potential risks to the confidentiality, integrity and availability of PHI. If laptop computers are used to store the ePHI of patients or plan members, a risk assessment should show that there is a risk of...
Three Breaches of Physical Medical Records Impact at Least 4,100 Individuals
Three healthcare organizations have recently reported security breaches involving the theft/exposure of physical protected health information. While it is currently unclear exactly how many healthcare patients have been impacted, at least 4,100 individuals are known to have been affected. According to police reports, the total could be as high as 8,000 individuals. The largest confirmed breach has impacted 2,953 employees and residents of Catalina Post-Acute and Rehabilitation of Tucson, AZ. The nursing home and rehabilitation center discovered that documents containing the sensitive information of residents and employees had been left unattended and unprotected in a location accessible by the public. A range of sensitive information was detailed in the documents including names, demographic information, Social Security numbers and medical diagnoses. An internal investigation of the incident was conducted to determine how the information was exposed and the potential for that information to have been inappropriately accessed. No evidence was uncovered to suggest any information had...
Beware of Medical Device Hijack Attacks! Medjack.3 Discovered
In 2015, security researchers discovered MEDJACK malware: A form of malware developed specifically to attack medical devices such as heart monitors, MRI machines, and insulin pumps. While medical devices have long been a potential target for cybercriminals, until the discovery of MEDJACK, the threat of cyberattacks on medical devices was largely theoretical. While MEDJACK could have been a one off, evidence emerged suggesting it was being actively developed. A second version of the malware – discovered last summer – was being used for advanced persistent attacks on hospitals via medical devices running on legacy systems. Vulnerable medical devices were being used as a springboard to gain access to networks used to store the electronic protected health information of patients. TrapX security discovered that at least three attacks on healthcare providers had occurred using MEDJACK.2 by the summer of 2016. MEDJACK.2 was capable of bypassing security controls as the malware used was old and was no longer deemed to be a threat by security solutions. More recent versions of Windows...



