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The HIPAA Journal is the leading provider of HIPAA training, news, regulatory updates, and independent compliance advice.

Steve Alder

Steve Alder is the editor-in-chief of The HIPAA Journal. Steve is responsible for editorial policy regarding the topics covered in The HIPAA Journal. He is a specialist on healthcare industry legal and regulatory affairs, and has 10 years of experience writing about HIPAA and other related legal topics. Steve has developed a deep understanding of regulatory issues surrounding the use of information technology in the healthcare industry and has written hundreds of articles on HIPAA-related topics. Steve shapes the editorial policy of The HIPAA Journal, ensuring its comprehensive coverage of critical topics. Steve Alder is considered an authority in the healthcare industry on HIPAA. The HIPAA Journal has evolved into the leading independent authority on HIPAA under Steve’s editorial leadership. Steve manages a team of writers and is responsible for the factual and legal accuracy of all content published on The HIPAA Journal. Steve holds a Bachelor’s of Science degree from the University of Liverpool. You can connect with Steve via LinkedIn or email via stevealder(at)hipaajournal.com

Healthcare Data Breaches Fell in October

There was a fall in the number of data breaches reported by healthcare organizations in the United States in October, according to the latest Breach Barometer report from Protenus. This is the second month in a row where the number of data breaches have fallen. The number of reported breaches dropped from an annual high of 42 incidents in August to 35 breaches in October; two fewer breaches than were reported last month. However, the number of exposed records increased from 246,876 in September to 776,533 records in October. The final victim count for the month could be considerably higher as while 35 breaches were reported, the number of individuals impacted by four of those incidents is not yet known. There were some notable IT security incidents reported last month: Four healthcare organizations reported being attacked with ransomware in October. Three of those incidents resulted in a permanent loss of healthcare data. Two organizations attempted to recover data from backups, only for the backup recovery process to fail, while one healthcare organization reported data loss as a...

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NIST Releases Guidelines for Securing Internet-Connected Devices

On Tuesday this week at the Splunk GovSummit in Washington D.C., The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) unveiled its Systems Security Engineering guidelines (NIST SP 800-160) – A set of detailed guidelines to help security engineering and other engineering professionals better protect Internet-connected devices. The NIST guidelines are the product of four years of research and development. They have been available in draft form since 2014, although the document has only just been finalized. The guidelines were initially scheduled to be released in December, although NIST took the decision to bring forward the release date and published the finished document a month early. According to NIST, “the need for trustworthy secure systems has never been more important to the long-term economic and national security interests of the United States.” Currently, Internet-connected devices are coming to market without adequate security controls. Only when hackers succeed in compromising those devices do the risks become abundantly clear. Improving device security is a complex...

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Emblem Health Mailing Error Exposes Members’ Social Security Numbers
Nov16

Emblem Health Mailing Error Exposes Members’ Social Security Numbers

Emblem Health, one of the largest health plans in the United States, has discovered a printing error has resulted in some members’ Social Security numbers being printed on the outside of envelopes during a recent mailing. The New York-based health insurer says the privacy breach affects members of its subsidiary company, Group Health Inc. (GHI). The error was made while mailing Medicare Prescription Drug Plan Evidence of Coverage documents to health plan members. Normally, all mailings include a unique mailing identifier which is printed on the envelope. These ID numbers are randomly generated and are included on the envelopes to help keep track of mailings. However, for the latest mailing, an error was made that resulted in members Health Insurance Claim Number (HICN) being included in the electronic file that was sent to the health plan’s mailing vendor. That number was then printed on the envelopes instead of the mailing identifier. HICN numbers are formed from members’ 9-digit Social Security numbers. Affected members therefore had their Social Security numbers printed on...

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Horizon BCBS of New Jersey Privacy Breach Impacts 170,000 Members
Nov16

Horizon BCBS of New Jersey Privacy Breach Impacts 170,000 Members

Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey has been alerted to a printing error that resulted in a limited amount of members’ protected health information being disclosed to other plan members. According to a statement issued by Horizon BCBSNJ, the error was made by its printing vendor, Command Marketing Innovations of Garfield. Between October 31 and November 2, Horizon BCBSNJ’s vendor printed and mailed Explanation of Benefit letters to members; however, an error resulted in some members’ names, claim numbers, Member ID numbers, dates of service, service codes, provider and facility names, and a limited description of services being printed on EOB letters that were send to other members. Horizon BCBSNJ says the error was identified on November 2 and the printing run was halted, but not before letters had been mailed to around 170,000 members. Not all of those members will have received letters containing the PHI of other members, but Horizon BCBSNJ has been unable to determine exactly how many of the letters included other members’ PHI. According to Horizon spokesman Kevin...

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Secure Mobile Access 1000 Series OS 12.0 Launched by SonicWall
Nov16

Secure Mobile Access 1000 Series OS 12.0 Launched by SonicWall

As more businesses take advantage of remote workers, and the use of mobile devices grows, businesses seek solutions that provide an equivalent level of protection for remote and mobile workers as can be achieved within an organization’s facilities. SonicWall’s answer is the Secure Mobile Access (SMA) solution which allows security policy enforcement for mobile and remote workers. This week, SonicWall announced it has launched an updated version of its Secure Mobile Access 1000 Series OS. Version 12.0 includes several enhancements to improve security for remote and mobile users, regardless of the data types accessed or devices used to connect to cloud and on-premise resources. The solution offers enforced SSL VPN to essential applications, data and resources regardless of device type or operating system, with access granted only to trusted users with access rights determined by the health metrics of the connecting device and its location. The solution allows up to 20,000 connections per appliance and large enterprises can combined appliances to provide hundreds of thousands of...

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