U.S. HealthWorks Announces Theft of Encrypted Laptop and Decryption Key
Healthcare providers can use data encryption to ensure that the theft of portable devices does not result in the exposure of patients’ protected health information. However, encryption is not infallible, as U.S. HealthWorks has discovered. A laptop computer containing the PHI of 1,400 patients was recently stolen from a U.S. HealthWorks employee. While this would not usually result in the issuing of breach notifications to patients, in this case the employee had written down the password to access the device and decrypt data. The password was kept with the laptop and it was also stolen. Upon discovery of the theft of the device along with the password, U.S. HealthWorks conducted a full investigation to determine which patients may have had their PHI exposed. The investigation did not uncover evidence to suggest that any data have been used inappropriately, and the possibility remains that the data stored on the device were not accessed. However, if the thief were to use the password to gain access to the device, it would be possible to access emails which contained sensitive...
Californian Healthcare Provider Informs Patients of Ransomware Attack
Yuba Sutter Medical Clinic in Yuba City, California has reported a recent ransomware attack that resulted in certain parts of its network being taken out of action. Prompt action was taken to restore all encrypted files. Systems were only out of action for a short while. However, due to the inability to access patient data, patients did experience delays in receiving treatment. The attack occurred on or around August 3, 2016, and resulted in the encryption of internal clinical data and patient health information. All data were backed up and could be restored without any data loss or data corruption, although appointments needed to be rescheduled for some patients. The decision was taken to delay notifying patients while an investigation was conducted and appropriate authorities were notified of the incident. Federal law enforcement authorities are continuing to investigate the incident and a policy review and internal investigation into the incident is ongoing. Under HIPAA Rules, ransomware attacks on healthcare organizations are reportable unless the covered entity can demonstrate...
King of Prussia Dental Associates Announces Potential PHI Breach
King of Prussia Dental Associates (KOPDA) has announced that a third party may have gained access to a server containing the protected health information of its patients. The incident also impacts patients of its affiliate, Pediatric Dentistry of Collegeville. KOPDA started experiencing problems with its computer network on or around June 1, 2016. The IT specialist employed by KOPDA started investigating the problems and became concerned that the issues may have been caused deliberately by a third party. In order to determine whether access to the network had been gained, KOPDA retained the services of a leading computer firm to conduct a thorough forensic analysis of its network. On June 23, the forensics firm determined that a third party may have gained access to the server and the KOPDA network. On June 29, the firm also determined that the breach may have affected patients of Pediatric Dentistry of Collegeville. Patients affected by the incident were mailed breach notification letters on September 9, 2016 and have been offered credit monitoring and identity theft protection...
8.8 Million Healthcare Records Breached in August
August was a bad month for healthcare data breaches. More than 8.8 million patient and health plan member records were exposed or stolen. 8,804,608 to be precise. According to the latest installment of the Protenus Breach Barometer, the total number of healthcare records stolen or exposed this summer now exceeds 20 million. In August, 44 breach reports were submitted to the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights which relate to 42 separate incidents. That makes August the worst month so far this year for healthcare data breaches, and second worst in terms of the number of healthcare records exposed. Only June saw more records breached (11,061,649). The total number of breaches reported so far in 2016 is now up to 233. The Breach Barometer shows that one of the biggest threats to healthcare data security is insiders. Insiders were responsible for causing 42.86% of the data breaches reported in August. Hacking – including ransomware attacks – was the second biggest cause of breaches accounting for 28.57% of incidents. Loss and theft of devices...
St. Jude Medical Sues Muddy Waters/MedSec; FDA to Investigate Allegations
On Wednesday this week, St. Jude Medical announced it had filed a lawsuit against Muddy Waters and MedSec Holdings for intentionally disseminating ‘false and misleading’ information about the company’s medical devices in order to devalue stock and profit from the disclosure. St. Jude Medical is seeking unspecified damages and the forfeiture of all investment profits. Short-sellers profit from the devaluation of stock by borrowing shares and selling them prior to an expected fall in stock prices. When the price falls, the stock is repurchased and returned to the lender. Fees are paid to the lender of the stock and any profits made are retained by the short-seller. In this case, MedSec was paid a consultancy fee by Muddy Waters for providing the research and the company stands to receive a share of any profits made by Muddy Waters. Following the publication of the Muddy Waters report, stock prices fell by approximately 10%, although they later recovered some of their value and are now trading at around 3-4% lower than before the Muddy Waters report was published. St. Jude Medical has...



