American Family Care Announces 7200-Patient PHI Breach
Birmingham, AL-based healthcare provider, American Family Care, has alerted 7,200 patients to a breach of protected health information that was caused as a result of a third party software error. An unauthorized individual gained access to systems used to store ePHI on multiple occasions over a period of 10 months. Affected individuals had a limited amount of PHI exposed on CDs containing X-ray images that were provided to patients. American Family Care conducted a thorough investigation and determined that there was a fault with the design and installation of third party software which resulted in the PHI of patients being exposed. No Social Security numbers, medical information, Driver’s license numbers, or insurance information were exposed, although affected patients did have their name, medical record number, date of birth, and gender exposed as a result of the error. The breaches of PHI occurred at four American Family Care Clinics: AFC Smyrna in Tennessee, and AFC’s Alabaster, Flintridge, and Wetumpka clinics in Alabama. Affected patients had visited the clinic between...
Forcepoint Introduces New Technology to Secure Connections for Roaming Workers
IT teams may be able to secure their wired and wireless on-premises networks, although it is much harder to secure users’ connections to the Internet when they are outside the corporate network and connect to the Internet via wireless hotspots. Organizations with a high percentage of remote or mobile workers often struggle to secure employees’ devices and provide secure, reliable access to data via third-party networks and public Wi-Fi hotspots. A highly mobile workforce is now becoming the norm with more workers now accessing networks remotely, and that calls for technological solutions to ensure devices and data remain secure. Unfortunately, while many cloud-based security solutions can be deployed to reduce risk, many do not give IT security teams visibility in the actions taken by remote workers. Many solutions also mask the users’ true locations, which means it is not possible to access localized content and neither enforce geofencing controls. Forcepoint has now developed a solution that helps organizations improve security for a mobile workforce and ensure visibility into...
New Blue Coat Appliance Gives Organizations Better Visibility into Encrypted Traffic
Malicious actors are increasingly using SSL traffic to hide malware according to security researchers at Blue Coat Systems. The use of SSL/TLS encrypted sites is growing due to concern about the privacy of website visitors. While SSL/TLS offers increased security, it also gives malicious actors the opportunity to hide malware, command and control center communications, and data exfiltration. The threat is rising at an alarming rate. Blue Coat researchers identified 58 times as many SSL-cloaked C&C channels and 200-fold rise in C&C servers using SSL in 2015. While organizations have implemented URL filtering and secure web gateways to protect their networks from malware, many solutions do not have visibility into encrypted traffic. Many organizations find that security appliances that can decrypt and re-encrypt SSL traffic are not without their issues. The capacity of some appliances and filtering solutions reduces by as much as 80% when configured to inspect SSL traffic, meaning SSL inspection must be turned off or capacity needs to be expanded. Blue Coat’s solution is a...
Two Cases of Unauthorized PHI Access by Employees Reported
Two healthcare providers have announced they have discovered employees have improperly accessed the protected health information of patients. In one case, the medical records of 5,400 were improperly accessed over a period of 4 years. Providence Health & Services in Oregon recently conducted an internal audit which included the checking of ePHI access logs. Auditors discovered that a Portland-based employee had been accessing patient files without any legitimate work reason for doing so. The improper access first started in July 2012 and continued until April 2016. During that time, the records of approximately 5,400 patients were accessed. The files included patient names, demographic information, details of medical treatments, and potentially also medical insurance details and Social Security numbers. Providence Health & Services does not believe that the employee disclosed any patient information to any other individuals nor that any information has been used inappropriately. The discovery has prompted Providence Health & Services to introduce new controls to prevent...
StarCare Specialty Health System Reports Potential PHI Breach
The protected health information of 2,844 StarCare Specialty Health System patients has potentially been compromised following the burglary of StarCare/StarQuest offices in Lubbock, Texas on May 30, 2016. Thieves broke into the offices at 3315 East Broadway and stole five laptop computers. One of those devices contained the ePHI of patients including names, telephone numbers, Social Security numbers, medical record numbers, Medicaid/Medicare numbers, diagnoses, and admission and discharge dates. It is unclear whether the laptop was password protected, although the data were not encrypted. A box of patient files was also in the office and it is possible that the information contained in some of the files may have been viewed by the burglars, although the paperwork was not removed from the office. All affected individuals had previously received Behavioral Health program services, Intellectual Developmental Disabilities program services, and/or and Therapeutic Treatment Community services from StarCare. While it is not possible to prevent break-ins and theft of equipment, it is...



