New York Rule Change Allows Clinicians to Access Minors’ PHI via State HIE
Healthcare providers that participate in the Western New York health information exchange – HEALTHeLINK – are now able to access the health information of minors aged between 10 and 17 after the passing of a new rule covering patient data access through qualified information exchanges. The new rule allows the information of minors to be accessed if prior consent has been obtained by from parents or legal guardians via signed consent forms. To date, more than 870,000 adults in Western New York have already signed consent forms allowing their children’s information to be shared. The rule change will ensure that treating pediatricians have access to the most up to date information, thus allowing them to make informed decisions about the best treatments to provide. The move will help to ensure that full access to the full range of health information can always be obtained, which has previously been an issue when minors have received medical services from multiple healthcare providers. The rule change will help to ensure safer and more efficient provision of clinical care....
Fetal Tissue Firms Guilty of Systemic HIPAA Violations
The U.S. House of Representatives Select Investigative Panel has published the findings from its investigation into the sale of fetal tissue by abortion clinics, revealing systemic HIPAA violations by both abortion clinics and tissue procurement businesses. An investigation was requested by the Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations following revelations made by undercover journalist David Daleiden. In 2015, Daleiden arranged a serious of meetings with businesses involved in the fetal tissue procurement industry via the not-for-profit group Center for Medical Progress (CMP). Daleiden secretly recorded abortion providers – and companies involved in the fetal tissue business – detailing the nature of the business of buying and selling tissues from aborted fetuses. Daleiden’s meetings uncovered some dark truths about the practices employed by abortion clinics to obtain fetal tissue, including how termination procedures were often changed in order to obtain more intact specimens, including the use of illegal abortion procedures. The investigation...
Patients Holding Back Health Information Over Data Privacy Fears
A fully interoperable health system is becoming closer to reality. Barriers to health data sharing are being removed and the ONC and HHS’ Office for Civil Rights are stepping up their efforts to prevent information blocking by healthcare providers. However, in order for information to be able to flow, it is essential that information is collected. If healthcare providers and other healthcare organizations only have access to partial medical histories, the usefulness of health data will be limited. Unfortunately, many patients are reluctant to provide their full medical histories to their healthcare providers, and even when information is provided, many patients do not want that information shared with anyone other than their primary healthcare provider. Privacy and security issues are a major concern, and the problem is growing. As healthcare data breaches continue to increase year on year, consumer confidence is decreasing. This has a direct impact on the willingness of patients to share their health data. Important Medical Information is Being Withheld by Patients The extent to...
11GB of Sensitive Data Left Unprotected by Department of Defense Subcontractor
A security researcher has discovered that the sensitive data of psychologists, doctors and other health workers employed by the United States Special Operations Command (SOCOM) have been exposed on the Internet by Woodbridge, VA-based Potomac Healthcare, a subcontractor for the Department of Defense. Potomac Healthcare supplies health workers to government organizations through Booz Allen Hamilton. Chris Vickery of MacKeeper discovered 11GB of internal Potomac data were left unprotected and could be accessed over the Internet without a username or a password. The data included names, Social Security numbers, locations, assigned units, and salaries of psychologists, doctors, and other healthcare professionals. The files also included lists of websites and programs with their associated usernames and passwords. Vickery said that the details of at least two Special Forces data analysts who had “Top Secret government clearance” were also present in the data. It is unclear for how long the data had been exposed and whether any other individuals had gained access to the information....
Massachusetts Data Breach Notification Archive Now Available Online
The Office of Consumer Affairs and Business Regulation of the state of Massachusetts has taken a major step toward improving transparency by making its data breach notification archive available to the public. Previously, members of the public were permitted to view the breach reports, but only by submitting a public records request. Now all breach notifications made to the state’s Office of Consumer Affairs and Business Regulation can be viewed online. The Massachusetts Data Breach Notification Archive can be viewed and downloaded in PDF form, with the identity theft report detailing the date the incident was reported, the organization affected, breach type, number of residents impacted, types of sensitive data exposed (SSNs, Driver’s license numbers, financial information, credit/debit card numbers), and whether credit monitoring services have been offered to breach victims. The reports include breaches of both physical records and electronic personal information from 2007. The report for 2016 currently includes 1,865 breach summaries. State law (Chapter 93H) requires all...



