PHI of Pulse Victims Improperly Accessed by Orlando Health Employees
A number of employees of Orlando Health have breached HIPAA Rules by accessing the medical records of patients without authorization. Some of the patients who had their privacy violated were survivors of the shooting at the Orlando Pulse nightclub. The medical records of patients were first accessed on June 15, 2016; three days after the Pulse shooting. However, Orlando Health did not discover the privacy breach until July 12. Breach notification letters were sent to affected patients a month later. Orlando Health has not disclosed how many employees improperly accessed the medical records of patients, although the breach notification letter indicates only one employee was involved. However, Orlando Health issued a statement to Eyewitness news saying the privacy breach involved “team members” violating hospital rules. Orlando Health has not disclosed how many patients had their medical records viewed, although at least two victims of the Pulse shooting had their medical records improperly accessed by at least one Orlando Health employee. The types of data accessed includes names,...
Outer Banks Hospital Reports Loss of Two Thumb Drives Containing PHI
Given the ease of transferring data securely using HIPAA-compliant cloud storage services, it is difficult to understand why thumb drives are still being used by healthcare organizations, especially the use of thumb drives without encryption. Due to their small size thumb drives are easy to lose, as has been discovered by North Carolina’s Outer Banks Hospital. Assets from the OBX Cardiopulmonary Rehabilitation program of Eastern Carolina Cardiovascular P.A. had been acquired by Outer Banks Hospital recently. While transferring data from Eastern Carolina Cardiovascular to the Outer Banks Hospital, two thumb drives were lost. The drives contained the protected health information of patients going back 12 years. The data were transferred between June 20 and June 21 and the thumb drives were discovered to be missing on June 22. An external forensics firm was brought in to conduct an investigation to determine which data were on the missing drives and the patients had been affected. The investigation revealed that the drives contained names and demographic information, emergency contact...
Locky Ransomware Attacks on Hospitals Increase
According to a new report from security firm FireEye, Locky ransomware attacks on hospitals have surged this month. Criminal gangs that have previously used the Dridex banking Trojan for attacks appear to have switched to Locky and the healthcare sector is being targeted. Hospitals now face an increased risk of experiencing Locky crypto-ransomware attacks. FireEye discovered a number of “massive” email campaigns were launched this month. Each of those campaigns has been unique. The attackers have used different text for the phishing emails, one-off code for each campaign, different malicious URLs, and unique encoding functions and keys for each campaign. The Rise of Locky Locky ransomware was first discovered in early 2016 and has been used in a number of attacks on healthcare organizations. Most notably, the attack on Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center in February. That attack resulted in a ransom of $17,000 being paid in order to obtain keys to decrypt locked data. Early Locky campaigns have used JavaScript downloaders to install the crypto-ransomware, with the malicious files...
Healthcare Leaders Need to Move Faster to Meet Cybersecurity Challenges
The response from the healthcare industry to current cybersecurity threats has not been fast enough and basic IT security measures are still not being adopted, according to a Nashville-based FBI Supervisory Special Agent. Speaking at last week’s CHIME/AEHIS LEAD Forum Event at Sheraton Downtown Nashville, Scott Augenbaum – an FBI Supervisory Special Agent in the Memphis Division – explained the attendees that too little is being done to keep healthcare data secure. He also pointed out that in the majority of cases, healthcare data breaches could easily have been prevented. When Augenbaum is called upon to visit healthcare organizations following breaches of protected health information, he usually discovers that simple data security measures could have prevented the exposure or theft of PHI. “90 percent of what I see could easily have been prevented. I do not go into a data breach situation where I don’t say, now, wow, that was sophisticated.” He also said that while investment in cybersecurity has increased in the healthcare industry, the situation is not getting better....
Rotech Healthcare Reports 967-Record PHI Breach
The protected health information of 967 patients of Orlando, FL-based Rotech Healthcare Inc., has been discovered in the residence of third party who was unauthorized to have the information. Rotech Healthcare, a provider of respiratory and sleep apnea equipment, was notified of the PHI breach by law enforcement officers on June 13, 2016. The data listed on the recovered documents include names, addresses, patient ID numbers, Social Security numbers, phone numbers, dates of birth, and the name of the facility where patients received healthcare services. The data appears to have been taken from Rotech Systems; a subsidiary of Rotech Healthcare Inc. It is not clear at this stage how the data came to be in the possession of an unauthorized individual, but a full investigation is underway. Rotech Healthcare has enlisted the services of a third party cybersecurity firm to perform a forensic analysis of its systems to determine the source of the breach. While the breach was discovered in June and Rotech was informed of the incident promptly, it has taken some time to recover the...



