Sunbury Plaza Dental Discovers Theft of Patient Files
Thieves have broken into a storage facility used by Sunbury Plaza Dental of Westerville, Ohio and have stolen files containing patients’ full names, along with addresses, dates of birth, and Social Security numbers. Break-ins at storage facilities are not uncommon; however, it is relatively rare for paper files to be taken by thieves. In this case, some patients’ files were removed from the facility. Sunbury Plaza Dental believes the files were taken with intent to use patients’ data to commit identity theft and fraud. The break-in occurred at some point between March 10 and March 20, 2016, although the theft was not discovered by Sunbury Plaza Dental until May 25, almost two months after the incident occurred. Local law enforcement officers were alerted to the theft and break-in and notified Sunbury Plaza Dental of the incident. The majority of files in the storage unit were undisturbed, although some files had been removed, according to healthcare provider’s substitute HIPAA breach notice. All of the files have now been recovered from the thieves and patients’ files are all now...
How Does OCR Deal with HIPAA Complaints?
The Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights (OCR) encourages individuals to file complaints about HIPAA-covered entities, or their business associates, if they feel that their privacy has been violated. Individuals are also able to file complaints if they believe the privacy of other individuals have been violated. Complaints about potential HIPAA violations are investigated by OCR, and while many prove to be unsubstantiated, oftentimes a HIPAA covered entity or an employee of that organization, is discovered to have violated patient privacy or breached HIPAA Rules. OCR receives many complaints and the breach portal contains many hundreds of breach reports from covered entities that have experienced major breaches of PHI, yet only a tiny percentage result in civil monetary penalties being issued or financial settlements being agreed. What happens to all the other complaints that involve violations of HIPAA Rules? What action does OCR take against covered entities that violate the privacy of patients or failed to adhere to HIPAA Rules? In the vast majority...
Medical Office Documents Discovered in Rock Springs Dumpster
Medical documents containing information about former patients of the College Hill Health Center in Rock Springs, WY., have been discovered in a dumpster. A statement issued by the Wyoming Board of Medicine says the documents have now been retrieved, but an inventory has yet to be conducted. It is unclear exactly how many patients have been affected, the type of documents that were discovered, or the extent of patient information that has been exposed. College Hill Health Center has recently been acquired by Memorial Hospital as part of a settlement with the former owner, Dr. Amr Etman. Dr. Etman and the medical center staff were required to vacate the property by July 8 this year, although patients of the health center were allegedly informed that they could collect their medical records in person prior to June 30, 2016., according to the Rock Springs Rocket Miner. Any medical records which remained became the property of Memorial hospital. Electronic records were turned over to the hospital, and Dr. Etman arranged for the paper medical records to be collected and destroyed, in...
Large Privacy and Security Gaps at Non-HIPAA Covered Entities Highlighted by ONC Report
Consumers’ health data is potentially being placed at risk by entities that are not covered by HIPAA Rules, according to a recent report issued by the ONC. The report – Examining Oversight of the Privacy & Security of Health Data Collected by Entities Not Regulated by HIPAA – was produced following a study of the application of privacy and security requirements to non-HIPAA covered entities and business associates. The report also draws on work conducted by the FTC, National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics (NCVHS), and OCR. The ONC explains in the report that a large number of organizations are now collecting, storing, and transmitting health data, yet many of those organizations are not subject to the same rules concerning the protection of ePHI as traditional healthcare organizations. Data and privacy protections at non-HIPAA-covered entities are not always robust and numerous gaps exist that place the health data of individuals at risk. The Scope of HIPAA is Limited HIPAA covers traditional healthcare organizations that perform electronic transactions –...
Lasair Aesthetic Health Notifies Patients of Privacy Breach
Denver, CO-based Lasair Aesthetic Health, P.C., has alerted 1,835 patients that their privacy was violated by a former employee who secretly emailed a limited amount of their protected health information to a personal email account. The former Lasair manager used her mobile phone to login to her work email account on May 11, 2016 and sent documents and a list of patients to her personal email account. The patient list contained a limited amount of patients’ protected health information including full names and details of the amounts that each patient had spent on medical services at Lasair in 2015. No highly sensitive data such as insurance information, Social Security numbers, credit card details or other financial information were compromised, although a couple of patients had photographic images (not including face shots) and treatment results emailed to the former manager’s personal email address. Lasair discovered the privacy incident a day later on May 12, 2016., and launched an internal investigation. The employee was contacted and instructed to delete all patient...



