Oak Cliff Orthopaedic Associates Alerts Patients to Potential PHI Breach
More than 1,000 current and former patients of Oak Cliff Orthopaedic Associates have been notified that unauthorized individuals may have viewed some of their protected health information. Boxes of paper business records and other items were stolen from an off-site storage facility used by the Dallas orthopedic firm. It is currently unclear when the theft occurred and how long the thieves had access to the information, although the theft was discovered on October 17, 2016. The documents contained patients’ names, addresses, and medical record numbers, although an investigation revealed that some of the documents also contained certain patients’ credit card numbers, Social Security numbers, and banking information. Patients affected by the incident had received medical services from Oak Cliff Orthopaedic Associates between 2006 and 2007. The Lewisville Police Department did manage to recover the stolen files and they have now been returned to Oak Cliff Orthopaedic Associates and are now secured. The stolen items were found in a hotel room, but it is unclear whether the thieves have...
November 2016 Worst Month for Healthcare Data Breaches: 57 Incidents Reported
Many people will be glad to see the back of 2016. It has been a difficult year, especially for healthcare organizations. Ransomware attacks have increased, hacking incidents are up, and more data breaches have been reported this year than in any other year since records started to be kept by the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights (OCR). The year is certainly not ending well. November saw the highest number of healthcare data breaches of any month in 2016, including August; a particularly bad month for the healthcare industry when 42 protected health information (PHI) breaches were reported by covered entities. However, November’s total was 35% higher than August and 60% higher than October, according to the November Breach Barometer Report from Protenus. Last month, 57 healthcare data breaches reported which is almost two incidents per day. Fortunately, the breaches that were reported were relatively small and the downward trend in the number of exposed/stolen records continued for the second month in a row. In total, 458,639 healthcare records were...
ONC Issues Challenge to Develop a New Online Model Privacy Notice Generator
The Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) has challenged designers, developers, and health data privacy experts to create a new online Model Privacy Notice (MPN) generator. At present, the MPN is a voluntary resource that helps health technology developers who collect electronic health data provide information to consumers about how health data is collected, used, and protected. The purpose of the MPN is to improve transparency and clearly display information about an organization’s privacy practices to enable consumers to make an informed decision about whether to use a particular product. While the ONC, in conjunction with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), developed a Model Privacy Notice in 2011, technology has moved on considerably in the past five years. The MPN was intended to be used for personal health records, but the range of products that collect health data is now considerable and includes wearable devices and mobile applications. The current MPN is therefore somewhat dated. ONC notes that...
IBM: 70% of Businesses Paid Cybercriminals to Unlock Ransomware
Ransomware has grown in popularity over the past two years and 2016 has seen record numbers of attacks on businesses. Cybercriminals see ransomware as an easy way to make money. Rather than having to infiltrate a system, steal data, and sell those data on the black market – a process that can take months before payment is received – a ransomware infection usually results in quick payment of funds. Payments are typically received within 7 days of infection. Ransoms are usually charged based on the number of devices that have been infected. Figures from Trend Micro suggest the average ransom demand is for $722 per infected device. The latest ransomware variants such as Locky, Samas, CryptoLocker, Xorist, and CryptorBit are capable of encrypting files on the infected device and shared and network drives and portable storage devices. Infections can rapidly spread throughout a network and many machines can be infected. The recent ransomware attack on the Madison County, IN saw a ransomware infection spread to 600 computers and 75 servers. Madison Count paid $21,000 for the...
National Governors Association Releases Roadmap for States to Improve Heath Data Sharing
To support effective decision making, improve the care provided to patients, and cut the costs of healthcare provision, healthcare data must be readily available to all healthcare providers. While other industry sectors have taken great strides toward improving the flow of information to increase efficiency, the healthcare industry still lags behind other industries. There are still many barriers in place which are preventing the meaningful exchange of health information. There is currently considerable confusion about the restrictions imposed by the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) and state laws on health information privacy. State governments in particular require assistance navigating these rules and regulations so they can play their part in improving the flow of healthcare data and can more effectively drive forward policies that support a fully interoperable nationwide healthcare system. The Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) previously awarded a cooperative funding...



