Pennsylvania Ambulatory Surgery Center Alerts 13K Patients to Ransomware Attack
Langhorne, PA-based Ambulatory Surgery Center at St. Mary has announced that it was the victim of a ransomware attack on June 1, 2016, according to the Bucks County Courier Times. The IT department was alerted to the ransomware infection by staff members who were prevented from accessing files stored on its computer network. While other ransomware victims have been forced to give in to attacker’s demands in order to recover encrypted files, the Ambulatory Surgery Center was able to restore all affected files from a backup and did not have to resort to paying the ransom demand. As was confirmed this week by the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights, a ransomware attack on a healthcare organization requires notifications to be sent to patients to alert them to the possible disclosure of their protected health information. The Ambulatory Surgery Center sent breach notification letters to almost 13,000 patients last week to advise them that their PHI may have been accessed. All individuals affected by the security breach have been offered credit monitoring...
Oregon Health & Science University to Pay OCR $2.7 Million for 2013 Data Breaches
Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU) has agreed to settle a case with the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights stemming from two data breaches experienced in 2013. A penalty of $2.7 million will be paid by OHSU to settle alleged HIPAA violations without admission of liability. The privacy breaches occurred shortly after each other in 2013. Within the space of three months, the protected health information of over 7,000 patients was exposed. The first breach of patient data involved the theft of an unencrypted laptop computer from a vacation apartment in Hawaii that was rented by an OHSU physician. The laptop computer contained the PHI of 4,022 patients. The second incident involved the accidental disclosure of PHI via a cloud storage service. Physicians were using the Internet service to share a spreadsheet containing patient data. However, the cloud service provider was a HIPAA business associate of OHSU and no business associate agreement had been obtained prior to the service being used. Consequently, the data of 3,044 patients was placed at...
House Passes Mental Health Reform Bill (Without the HIPAA Changes)
A mental health bill that aims to improve mental healthcare in the United States has been passed by the House. The bill – H.R. 2646 – which was first introduced three years ago, was intended to usher in sweeping changes to improve the treatment of mental illness in the United States. While the bill was passed with an overwhelming majority of 422-2 last Wednesday, a number of the more contentious issues needed to be removed from the bill. One of the sticking points that was dropped from the bill were the changes to the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA). The bill introduces a number of important changes that will improve mental health care; however, the proposed changes to HIPAA were opposed by a number of Democrats and Republicans. In order for the bill to be passed, the HIPAA changes had to be dropped. In its original form, the bill would have changed HIPAA Rules to permit healthcare providers to share mental health data about patients with their caregivers. Instead, the Department of Health and Human Services is now required to clarify the law...
Stolen Ultrasound Machines Contained PHI, says Kaiser Permanente
Kaiser Permanente discovered that some of its ultrasound machines and other medical equipment had been stolen by two company employees. Kaiser Permanente was alerted to the theft of equipment on June 10 and immediately launched an investigation. Efforts were then made to recover the missing equipment. Kaiser Permanente has now recovered the stolen equipment and has performed an analysis to determine whether any patient data were stored on the devices. Kaiser Permanente determined that some of the machines contained a limited amount of patients’ protected health information including MRN’s, patients first and last names, and ultrasound images. The equipment had been taken from a number of different Kaiser Permanente facilities and had been temporarily moved to a storage unit. The Kaiser Permanente investigation is ongoing, but it is believed that the ultrasound machines and medical equipment were only taken by the employees to sell on for profit, and not for any data stored on the devices. The theft of equipment has been reported to law enforcement and a criminal investigation has...
OCR Phase 2 HIPAA Audits: Documentation Requests Issued
The Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights (OCR) has now selected covered entities from its pool of eligible organizations and has chosen 167 for a HIPAA compliance audit. Covered entities selected for a compliance audit have now been notified by email. Those organizations now have just 10 days to respond to the emails and submit the requested documentation to the OCR. The audits – which are desk based – have been split between healthcare providers, health plans, and healthcare clearinghouses. The audits are being conducted on a geographically representative sample that includes healthcare organizations of all sizes. Desk audits of HIPAA business associates will follow in the fall. The desk audits comprise of a documentation check to ensure compliance with the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act’s Privacy, Security, and Breach Notification Rules. Earlier this year the OCR published details of the new audit protocol. The protocol contains a long list of different aspects of HIPAA Rules that could potentially be assessed by OCR...



