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...
OCR Ransomware Guidance: Ransomware Attacks Are Reportable Breaches
The Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights has issued new guidance on ransomware. A fact sheet on healthcare ransomware attacks has been published along with a 12-page document providing technical guidance for CIOs and CISOs on best practices to adopt to prevent ransomware infections, mitigation strategies to adopt when ransomware is installed on computers or healthcare networks, and detailed information on the correct ransomware response. The new guidance is essential reading for CISOs, CIOs, and all members of the senior leadership team. Ransomware and HIPAA The OCR has confirmed the proactive measures that covered entities should take to prevent ransomware infections: Perform a comprehensive, organization-wide risk analysis Establish a plan to remediate any identified risks to the confidentiality, integrity, or availability of ePHI Implement policies and procedures to safeguard ePHI against malicious software – including malware and ransomware Provide staff members with training on cybersecurity best practices Train authorized users to detect malicious...
Major 2016 Healthcare Data Breaches: Mid Year Summary
Cyberattacks on healthcare organizations are now a fact of life. As long as it remains profitable for hackers to conduct attacks on healthcare organizations, the cyberattacks will continue. Given the volume of healthcare data breaches now being reported, it is clear that the healthcare industry must do more to strengthen defenses against cyberattacks and insider threats. To do that, healthcare organizations need to look beyond HIPAA compliance. Healthcare organizations had a torrid time in 2015. In 2015, more healthcare records were stolen than in any other year since records of breaches started being published by the Office for Civil Rights. Some of the cyberattacks on healthcare providers and health insurers resulted in staggering amounts of data being stolen. Major 2016 Healthcare Data Breaches Until the last week in June it looked like the healthcare industry had avoided mega data breaches on the scale of the cyberattacks on Anthem, Premera BlueCross, and Excellus BlueCross BlueShield in 2015. However, as the first half of the year came to an end, a hacker offered a 9.3-million...
Another Hacked Healthcare Database Listed for Sale: Some Victims Confirmed
The listing of three healthcare databases containing 655,000 healthcare records in late June was followed by a posting of a much larger health insurer database containing 9.3 million records. Now, a fifth database has been offered for sale. The latest batch of healthcare data contains 23,565 patient records. The latest database was obtained by the hacker TheDarkOverlord “through the token impersonation of an employee.” The organizations whose data have been listed for sale have not come forward and confirmed that they are the victims, although further information has emerged linking two organizations to the latest breaches. After performing some investigative work on the samples provided by the hacker to confirm authenticity of the stolen data, Databreaches.net was able to determine that the database containing 48,000 records most likely came from Midwest Orthopedic Pain & Spine. This batch of data was initially claimed to have come from a healthcare organization in Farmington, Missouri. The DarkOverlord has since confirmed that the data came from the Scott A. Vanness-owned...
North Ottawa Medical Group Notifies 22,000 of Bizmatics Breach
North Ottawa Medical Group (NOMG) has notified 22,000 of its patients that they have been impacted by a malware infection that was discovered by its EMR management company, Bizmatics. NOMG joins a long list of organizations that have been impacted by the breach. The latest announcement takes the total number of patients affected by the security breach to over 265,000 individuals. The data potentially exposed as a result of the malware infection on Bizmatics’ server include patients’ names, addresses, health visit data, treatment information, health insurance information, and in some cases, Social Security numbers. The last four digits of payment cards could potentially also have been exposed. Patients affected by the breach had previously sought medical services at NOMG’s Internal Medicine, Family Practice, or Women’s Health physician practices. The investigation into the security incident conducted by Bizmatics did not uncover evidence to suggest that patient data had in fact been accessed by unauthorized individuals. The company also could not confirm whether the malware was...



