Midland Memorial Hospital Announces Potential PHI Breach
Midland Memorial Hospital has announced that some of its patients’ protected health information has potentially been viewed by unauthorized individuals. On April 8, 2016, the Midland, Texas-based hospital was alerted to a privacy breach that exposed patients’ names, addresses, dates of birth, medical diagnoses, medications, medical procedures, physician’s notes, medical record unit numbers, medical account numbers, and health information. In some cases, patients also had their Social Security numbers exposed. Patients’ PHI was left unprotected at a private residence by Mario M. Gross, M.D., a physician who had previously worked at the hospital. The paper files were left in an area where they could potentially have been accessed by members of the public. Once alerted to the security breach, staff from the hospital visited the residence and retrieved and secured the records. The hospital was unable to determine whether the records had actually been viewed by unauthorized individuals during the time that they were accessible; however, no evidence has been uncovered to suggest that any...
California Dept. of Corrections and Rehabilitation Reports Health Care Facility Privacy Breach
The California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation has announced that an employee of the Division of Adult Institutions’ California Health Care Facility emailed a document containing patients’ names and Social Security numbers to an individual unauthorized to view the data. The disclosure of patients’ data occurred on May 2, 2016 and was not believed to have been conducted with malicious intent. The email was simply sent to the wrong person. To reduce the risk of similar incidents occurring in the future, the California Health Care Facility has revised its policies and procedures. The email has also been deleted from the email system, although it is possible that the data were viewed by at least one unauthorized individual. All individuals affected by the privacy incident have been advised to place a fraud alert on their credit files and have been told to read the California Attorney General’s consumer tips for victims of privacy breaches and to take the appropriate steps they feel are necessary to mitigate risk. The incident has not yet appeared on the Department of...
Congressmen Call for Different HIPAA Rules for Malware and Ransomware Attacks
Ted Lieu, D-Calif. and Will Hurd, R-Texas., have written to OCR Deputy Director for Health Information Privacy Deven McGraw raising issues related to healthcare ransomware infections ahead of the release of new OCR guidance on ransomware attacks. The bipartisan pair of Congressmen have pointed out some important differences between ransomware infections and hacking, which they believe should be reflected in the upcoming guidance. They believe that ransomware should require different rules to other malware infections and hacking incidents, although there is some debate as to whether HIPAA Rules should treat different types of malware differently. The Congressmen point out in the letter that under 45 CFR § 164.402, a breach if ePHI is defined as “the acquisition, access, use, or disclosure of protected health information in a manner not permitted.” This would mean that a ransomware attack qualifies as a data breach. In order to encrypt data, those data must be accessed. Consequently, covered entities would be required to perform a risk assessment under HIPAA Rules. While...
Colorado Allergy Clinic Reports Ransomware Attack
Allergy, Asthma & Immunology of the Rockies, P.C. (AAIR) has experienced a ransomware infection on computers used to store the electronic protected health information (ePHI) of patients. The computers that were locked with the malicious file-encrypting malware contained the health records of 6,851 patients. The ePHI stored on the computers included patients’ names, medical test results, and Social Security numbers. The ransomware attack was discovered on May 16, 2016 and affected AAIR’s Glenwood Springs medical office. Staff at the office were unable to access files on computers and IT staff were alerted to a potential cyberattack. The IT department immediately shut down the company’s servers to prevent data exfiltration and to contain the infection. A third party cybersecurity firm was called in to conduct a forensic analysis of the allergy clinic’s network. According to a statement issued by AAIR’s attorney, Kari Hershey, “They weren’t able to track exactly what the hackers did, but what they did find was a draft of the ransom letter on the system.” It is unclear exactly...
Potential Privacy Breach at Planned Parenthood Dubuque Health Center
On July 1, 2016, Planned Parenthood of the Heartland announced that the protected health information (PHI) of certain patients of its Dubuque health center in Iowa may have been accessed by unauthorized individuals. The health center permanently closed its doors to patients this April year and the premises was listed for sale and was sold. However, hard copies of patient files were left in the Dubuque health center. In April 2016, individuals entered the medical center and could potentially have viewed and/or copied patient files. The potential breach was discovered by Planned Parenthood on May 6, 2016. The files have now been removed from the premises and have been secured. Planned Parenthood said this was an isolated incident and is not representative of the stringent privacy standards usually maintained by the healthcare organization. Patients affected by the potential privacy breach had sought treatment at the Dubuque health center between August 1, 2008 and April 30, 2014. In total, the PHI of 2,506 patients may have been compromised. Patients have now been notified of the...



