BayState Health Discovers 13,000 Patients Impacted by Phishing Attack
Springfield-MA-based Baystate Health has announced that five employees have fallen victim to a phishing scam that has potentially resulted in the exposure of the protected health information of as many as 13,000 patients. Scam emails were sent to a number of Baystate Health employees in August this year. The emails were well-written and realistic and appeared to have been sent internally from the human resources office. The emails appeared to have been sent to advise employees of some important changes to salaries and other important HR importation. However, by following the instructions in the email to view the information, employees inadvertently gave the attackers access to their email accounts and also a Baystate Health database which contained sensitive patient data. An investigation was launched into the phishing attack which revealed that names, demographic information, patient ID numbers, and dates of birth were all potentially been accessed by the attackers. Certain patients’ treatments and diagnoses were also exposed as a result of the scam. The investigation did not...
Healthcare Ransomware Infections Increased by 17% in Q3
According to the NTT Security Q3 Quarterly Threat Intelligence Report, the healthcare industry is now in fifth most targeted industry registering 11% of all attacks in Q3, behind the finance industry (23%), retail (19%), manufacturing (18%), and technology (12%). The report shows malware and ransomware continue to be a major problem for the healthcare industry. Q3 saw malware attacks increase by 67% and application-specific attacks rise by 28%, although there was a fall of 28% in web application attacks. Malware Attacks on Healthcare Organizations Rose by 67% Malware attacks on healthcare organizations increased by 67% in Q3. Viruses and worms the biggest subcategory accounting for 63% of attacks, followed by adware and malicious BTOs (22%), Trojans/droppers (12%), and Keyloggers and spyware (2%). The main delivery mechanism was spam email containing malicious attachments, which accounted for 73% of attacks. While malicious Word macros have previously been favored, NTT Security observed an increase in the use of Windows Script Files (WSFs), in particular for the delivery of...
2016 Set to be A Record Breaking Year for Healthcare Data Breaches
Healthcare security breaches have been increasing steadily throughout the year and the trend has continued throughout quarter 3. More healthcare data breaches have been reported in July, August, and September than in any other months of the year. In fact, more healthcare data breaches have been reported to the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights (OCR) so far in 2016 than in all of 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, and 2013combined . So far this year OCR has been informed of 243 healthcare data breaches. The breach count for 2016 to date has almost reached the count for all of 2015 – when 269 breaches of unsecured protected health information affecting more than 500 individuals were reported to OCR. There are still just over two months left of the year, although 2016 is well on track to be the worst year for healthcare data breaches. On the positive side, the massive data breaches of 2015 have not been repeated in 2016. To date, the health records of 14,310,091 individuals have been exposed or stolen. By this time last year, the victim count stood at 112,784,979...
OIG Uncovers Vulnerabilities in State Health Information Systems
An investigation of Colorado’s Department of Health Care Policy and Financing (HCPF) by the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Inspector General has revealed a number of security vulnerabilities that could potentially be exploited by hackers to gain access to personally identifiable information. The vulnerabilities identified by OIG placed the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of Colorado’s Medicaid data at risk. No evidence was uncovered to suggest any of the vulnerabilities had already been exploited, although exploitation of the security weaknesses could have disrupted critical Colorado Medicaid operations. OIG conducted an audit of HCPF information system general controls and policies and procedures in place in July 2015. The review was conducted to assess the effectiveness of its general controls over computer operations. OIG evaluated risk assessments, website security, database security, and USB device security for its Medicaid eligibility determination and claims processing information systems. The audit uncovered vulnerabilities existed in...
St. Joseph Health to Pay OCR $2.14 Million to Settle HIPAA Case
The Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights has announced it has agreed to settle potential violations of the HIPAA Privacy and Security Rules with St. Joseph Health (SJH). SJH is required to pay $2.140,500 to OCR and adopt a corrective action plan (CAP) to bring policies and procedures up to the standard demanded by HIPAA. SJH is a not-for-profit integrated Catholic health care delivery system sponsored by the St. Joseph Health Ministry. SJH provides a wide range of medical services throughout California, New Mexico and Texas though 14 acute care hospitals and numerous community clinics, skilled nursing facilities, and home health agencies. SJH was investigated following an ePHI breach reported to OCR on February 14, 2012. Files containing ePHI were created by SJH under the Meaningful Use Program; however, those files were left unprotected and accessible on the Internet for more than a year from February 1, 2011 to February 13, 2012. The PDF files had been indexed by Google – and potentially other search engines. During that time the ePHI of 31,800...



