Healthcare Pages Intercepted and Posted Online
Providence Health & Services, a not-for-profit health system operating in Alaska, California, Montana, Oregon, and Washington, has discovered its paging system has been breached by an unauthorized individual. Pages were intercepted and posted online exposing a limited amount of patients’ protected health information. The individual responsible for the pager attack posted pager transmissions that included patients’ names, room numbers, medication data, birth dates, medical record numbers, symptoms, diagnoses, and details of medical procedures. Providence Health & Services reports that the information sent via its pager network was limited to the minimum necessary information, in accordance with HIPAA Rules. Pages were accessed and disclosed publicly between October 25 and October 28, 2016. The breach was discovered on October 27. The breach notification letters sent to patients explain that PHI was only accessible on the website for a “couple of minutes at most.” The incident was not limited to Providence Health & Services. Other healthcare organizations were also...
Regular PHI Access Log Audits Can Prevent Major PHI Breaches
Infirmary Health has announced that an employee has been fired after being discovered to have accessed the health records of approximately 1,000 patients without authorization. The individual was required to access patients’ protected health information (PHI) for legitimate work reasons, yet data access rights were abused. The employee worked in the Atmore Community Hospital: A 49-bed facility serving patients in Escambia and Monroe counties in Alabama. A routine audit of PHI access logs on November 18, 2016 revealed that the individual first started inappropriately accessing patient records from October 3, 2015. Records continued to be inappropriately accessed until November 11, 2016. According to a press release issued by Infirmary Health, the information accessed was limited to patient names, admission dates and flowsheets. It is unclear why the information was accessed, although it is not believed that any data have been disclosed to any other individual nor copied and removed from the hospital. PHI appears to have been accessed purely out of curiosity. In accordance with...
Ransomware Encrypts Health Data for Three Months; PHI Still Inaccessible
Casa Grande, AZ-based Desert Care Family and Sports Medicine has alerted 500 patients to a potential breach of their protected health information (PHI) as a result of a ransomware infection. The ransomware was installed on a server used to store PHI in August this year; however, despite attempts to unlock the encryption, patient data have still not been decrypted and have remained inaccessible for more than three months. The information stored on the server includes patients’ names, addresses, birthdates, account numbers, diagnoses, treatment information, and disability codes. The healthcare provider took the affected server to a number of IT specialists in an attempt to unlock the encryption but to no avail. Free decryptors are available for certain ransomware variants via the No More Ransom Project; however, many of the most commonly used ransomware variants have yet to be cracked. The only options for recovering locked data are to pay the ransom demand or to restore the encrypted files from backups. Unfortunately, there is no guarantee that payment of a ransom will result in the...
New Report Published on Privacy Risks of Personal Health Wearable Devices
Wearable technology is now ubiquitous. Consumers have embraced the wide range of trackers and health apps that have come to market in recent years and manufacturers have responded to demand and have created an even broader range of wearable devices that track and monitor health metrics. Wearable devices have expanded from trackers that monitor heart rates, exercise levels, and sleep quality, to devices that collect a far greater range of health data. The data collected from those devices now includes information classed as protected health information (PHI) under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA). While the data collected by HIPAA-covered entities must be protected from unauthorized access under the HIPAA Privacy and Security Rules, those Rules only apply to healthcare providers, health plans, healthcare clearinghouses, and business associates of covered entities. Non-covered entities are not required to implement the safeguards demanded by HIPAA Rules to keep ‘PHI’ secure. If a wearable device is provided to a patient by a HIPAA-covered entity, the...
FDA Issues Final Cybersecurity Guidance for Medical Device Manufacturers
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has published final cybersecurity guidance for medical device manufacturers to help them better protect their devices from cyberattacks. The guidance will help device manufacturers implement a system for identifying and reporting potential security vulnerabilities to ensure flaws can be addressed before they are exploited by hackers. The threat of hackers using vulnerabilities in medical devices to gain access to sensitive data or cause patients to come to harm has been widely publicized in recent years. This year, many cybersecurity professionals have called for device manufacturers to do more to ensure their products – including defibrillators, pacemakers, and drug pumps – are made more secure. The FDA has previously issued warnings to device manufacturers and healthcare providers about medical device security risks. In 2015, the FDA warned of a vulnerability affecting Hospira insulin pumps, which could potentially be exploited by hackers to alter insulin doses to cause patients to come to harm. Earlier this year, short-selling...



