Children’s Mercy Hospital Announces Breach of Children’s PHI
Children’s Mercy Hospital in Kansas City, MO has announced that 238 children’s medical records have been stolen from a vehicle used by a hospital employee. The vehicle was locked and the records were stored in a hard-sided case, which was also locked. However, it is probable that the thieves managed to open the case and view the contents. The theft occurred on August 4, 2016 and the incident was immediately reported to local law enforcement. It took a number of days for the hospital to determine the exact contents of the case and to verify which patients had been affected. Patients were notified of the incident 26 days later, well within the time limit required by the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA). The data obtained by the thieves was limited in nature and did not include the types of information typically used for identity theft and fraud. No financial data, insurance information, or Social Security numbers were exposed. However, the families impacted by the breach have been urged to “take reasonable precautions” against identity theft and fraud. They...
MedStar Health Cardiology Associates Terminates Employee for PHI Theft
An employee of Medstar Health’s Cardiology Associates has been terminated after emailing the protected health information of 907 patients to a personal email account. The incident was discovered on July 5, 2016 prompting a full internal investigation. The email was sent from a company email account to the employee’s personal account on May 2, 2016. Cardiology Associates determined that there was no legitimate work reason for emailing the list of patients. The list contained the names of patients, their dates of birth, and health insurance ID numbers. Some Social Security numbers were also detailed on the list. The Cardiology Associates breach investigation did not uncover any evidence to suggest that any of the data were used inappropriately, although names, dates of birth, and Social Security numbers can be used to commit identity fraud, while insurance details could potentially be used to make fraudulent claims. Patients were notified of the privacy breach by mail on August 5, 2016. All individuals whose data were emailed to the personal account have been provided with a year of...
Muddy Waters Device Hacking Claims Questioned by Researchers
Last week, Carson Block – founder of short-selling firm Muddy Waters – released a report saying St. Jude Medical’s Merlin@home device for monitoring pacemakers contained critical security flaws that could be remotely exploited. Those exploits could be used to disrupt the function of the devices and cause them to fail. The research for the report was conducted by security firm MedSec. MedSec had been testing a range of devices from multiple manufacturers as part of an 18-month study of device security. MedSec chose not to present the findings to St. Jude, instead the research was offered to Muddy Waters. The two companies entered into a partnership with MedSec being paid a consultancy fee. MedSec will also benefit financially from any shorting of St. Jude Stock. Block was able to short St. Jude’s stock, with the value of shares falling by 5% last Thursday following the publication of the report. However, leading medical device security researchers from the University of Michigan have conducted their own experiments to test St. Jude devices for security vulnerabilities. Their...
New EMC Study Highlights Impact of New Cyber Threats
Organizations in the United States are failing to stay ahead of the curve when it comes to data security and that is costing them dearly. New research* conducted on behalf of EMC Corporation for its Global Data Protection Index 2016 shows organizations in the US – including healthcare organizations – are failing to implement the necessary technology to deal with new and emerging cyber threats. The impact of hardware failures, power failures, software failures, and data corruption have been reduced since the study was conducted in 2014, but even so, 13% more businesses have experienced data loss and disruption in the last 12 months than in 2014. According to the study, the average cost of data loss and disruption is $914,000 per year per organization. Part of the problem is the failure to create an “data vault” – An air-gapped secure data repository that remains secure, even in the event of a cyberattack. This is especially important given the rise in the use of ransomware. Whereas just a few months ago cybercriminals just wanted to get their hands on sensitive data to sell on...
ONC Announces Winners of the Healthcare Blockchain Challenge
Last month, the US Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) launched a challenge to explore the potential uses of Blockchain technology in healthcare and health-related research. While Blockchain is best known for its use in the digital currency Bitcoin, Blockchain technology has tremendous potential to benefit the healthcare industry, in particular to improve data privacy, security, and interoperability. Blockchain certainly shows great potential and is attracting considerable investment. In 2014, $299 million was invested in Blockchain by VC-backed companies and that figure rose to $474 million in 2015. Critics of Blockchain have expressed concern about the level of computing power needed and the cost of implementing Blockchain technology, claiming the use of the technology would therefore be extremely limited in healthcare. However, even though there are potential stumbling blocks, there was no shortage of potential applications submitted to the ONC. The ONC received more than 70 whitepapers from research...



