Farmington Medical Group Confirms Cyberattack
Last month, a series of cyberattacks were discovered to have occurred when healthcare databases were put up for sale on the Darknet marketplace TheRealDeal. The attacks were conducted by a hacker operating under the name TheDarkOverlord (TDO). The names of the organizations that had been attacked were not initially disclosed, although the locations of the organizations were included in the darknet listings. Initially, three healthcare organizations were believed to have been attacked, although the data from a much larger attack on a health insurer was posted a few days later. The initial listings on TheRealDeal included 48,000 records from a healthcare organization in Farmington, Missouri; 210,000 records from a healthcare organization in the Central/Midwest region of the U.S.; and 397,000 records from a healthcare organization in Georgia. The fourth posting contained 9.3 million records from an unnamed U.S. health insurer. The healthcare organization in Georgia, Athens Orthopedic Clinic, has already announced that it was recently attacked. Now the Farmington healthcare group...
Details Emerge on Laser Dermatologic Surgery Center Data Breach
Laser & Dermatologic Surgery Center reported a data breach to Office for Civil Rights (OCR) on June 14, 2016 that impacted 31,000 patients. It was initially unclear as to the nature of the breach, although further details have now emerged. Laser & Dermatologic Surgery Center has recently changed ownership. Prior to the new owners taking over the company the healthcare provider experienced a ransomware infection. All data were backed up and it was possible to restore all affected files from backups without paying the ransom demand. However, the new owners’ IT department discovered that while the ransomware infection had been addressed, malware was present on its system. It is not clear whether the malware was installed by the same individuals responsible for the ransomware attack. On March 21, 2016., after a review of access logs was conducted, it was also discovered that an unauthorized individual had gained access to the healthcare provider’s network. The first intrusion was determined to have taken place on March 1, 2016. While no evidence was discovered to suggest...
Locky Ransomware Becomes Biggest Email-Borne Security Threat
There has been a downward trend in the volume of spam email being sent in recent years. Spam email volume has fallen from between 65% and 71% of total email traffic in 2014 to between 52% and 59% in 2016*; however, while total volume is down, malicious spam email volume is increasing. The latest figures from Proofpoint show a sharp rise in malicious spam email during quarter 2 of 2016. Malicious email volume increased by 230% quarter over quarter. Locky Ransomware is Now the Biggest Email-Borne Threat During the first quarter of 2016, the biggest email-borne threat was the Dridex banking Trojan; however, quarter 2 has seen Locky take over number one spot. Locky, which was first discovered in February, has become highly prevalent and is now involved in 69% of email attacks involving malicious attachments. In Q1 Locky was involved in 24% of email-borne attacks on organizations. Both malware variants are delivered via JavaScript files attached to malicious spam email messages. New ransomware is also being developed at an alarming pace. Since December 2015, ransomware variants have...
Third of Hospitals Lack HIPAA-Compliant EHR Contingency Plans
According to a recent report issued by the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Inspector General, a third of hospitals do not have HIPAA-compliant EHR contingency plans in place, although most are “largely addressing” HIPAA requirements for EHRs. In September 2014, OIG sent a survey to 400 hospitals that had applied for Medicare EHR incentive payments and asked questions to determine whether HIPAA-compliant EHR contingency plans had been developed and implemented. Respondents were also asked about the extent to which EHR systems had been disrupted in the past. In addition to the survey, six hospitals were also selected for in-depth investigations involving site visits, interviews with hospital staff, documentation checks, and reviews of EHR contingency plans. The purpose of the study was to assess the state of hospitals’ EHR contingency planning and to determine whether patient health information could still be accessed during natural disasters and other situations where EHR system downtime occurs. In light of the recent ransomware attacks on hospitals in recent...
Athens Orthopedic Clinic Confirms Cyberattack: TDO Dumps More Data
Athens Orthopedic Clinic has confirmed that its patients have been impacted by a cyberattack which was conducted using the login credentials of one of its software vendors. Electronic medical records of current and former patients were breached according to the notice on the healthcare provider’s website. While the substitute breach notice did not explain the exact nature of the attack nor the number of patients affected by the breach, the incident to which the breach notice refers is the cyberattack conducted by TheDarkOverlord. Athens Orthopedic Clinic is the Georgia healthcare provider from which 397,000 records were stolen. In addition to patient data being offered for sale on darknet marketplace, TheRealDeal, more data have been recently dumped on data sharing website Pastebin. The records of 500 patients were initially disclosed by TDO for verification purposes. A further 509 records have recently been uploaded to Pastebin. The posting, which is still accessible, includes names, genders, ages, dates of birth, client type, social security numbers, addresses, and other raw...



