Tucson Emergency Room Patients’ PHI Stolen from Physician’s Vehicle
Approximately 1,000 patients in Southern Arizona have been notified of a breach of protected health information following the theft of a physician’s logbook. The logbook had been left in the vehicle of a physician who worked for Emergency Medicine Associates, which provided ER staff for Carondelet Health Network hospitals in Tucson, Arizona. A thief broke into the physician’s vehicle on or around March 25, 2016 and took the logbook. The physician had used the logbook to record brief notes relating to emergency room patients she had treated at Carondelet St. Joseph’s and Carondelet St. Mary’s hospitals in Tucson, AZ., between October 12, 2015 and March 25, 2016. The types of data recorded in the logbook include names, ages, genders, dates of birth, and medical record numbers along with the name of the hospital visited, hospital ID numbers, and dates of emergency room visits. Social Security numbers and health insurance information were not exposed, although some patients’ medical conditions had been noted in the logbook. Dr. Lori Levine, privacy officer for Emergency Medicine...
HHS Announces Release of the Final Data Security Policy Principles Framework
HHS Secretary Sylvia Matthews Burwell has announced the release of the final Data Security Policy Principles Framework for the Precision Medicine Initiative (PMI) which was launched by President Obama in early 2015. The Security Principles Framework was developed to help healthcare organizations that participate in the PMI understand the security measures that must be adopted to protect sensitive health, genetic, and environmental information. According to the HHS, the PMI will help to “enable a new era of medicine – one where doctors and clinicians are empowered to tailor their treatments to their patients’ needs, and patients can get individualized care,” The PMI is intended to help “deliver the right treatment to the right patient at the right time, taking into account an individual’s health history, genetics, environment, and lifestyle.” In February, the Obama Administration announced that great progress has been made so far, and that more than 40 commitments have been made by the private sector to advance precision medicine. Those commitments include a promise by leading EHR...
Cybersecurity Training Failing to Tackle Insider Threat
A recent Ponemon Institute/Experian study – Managing Insider Risk Through Training & Culture – has shown that companies are failing to provide adequate cybersecurity training to prevent negligent behavior by employees and to reduce the risk of an insider data breach. For the latest study, over 600 individuals from a wide range of organizations were questioned about their cybersecurity training programs. Respondents included C-suite executives, managers, and IT professionals from companies that had a data protection and privacy training (DPPT) program in place. The study revealed that 55% of companies have experienced a data breach in the past that was caused by employee negligence or human error. When asked about the risk of a data breach as a result of negligence or employee error the majority of companies were aware of the risk. 66% of respondents said they believed employees are the weakest link in the security chain, yet more than half of respondents said their cybersecurity training programs were not effective. When asked about training programs and employees...
Medical Colleagues of Texas Hacking Incident Impacts 68K Patients
Medical Colleagues of Texas, a physicians’ group in Katy, TX., has discovered an unauthorized individual gained access to its system containing the records of more than 68,000 patients. The exact nature of the incident has not been disclosed and an investigation into the security breach is ongoing. The physicians’ group was unaware how access was gained to its systems at the time of posting the breach notice; however, the investigation into the breach has determined that personnel files and patient medical records have potentially been accessed. Data stored on the compromised system include patients’ names, addresses, Social Security numbers, and health insurance information. The intrusion was first detected on March 8, 2016 when an office employee noticed unusual activity on the computer network of the obstetrics group. The activity was determined to be caused by an unauthorized individual who had gained remote access to the network. A computer forensics firm was called in to investigate the security breach. An attorney for the Medical Colleagues of Texas, Lindsay Nickle, issued a...
95K More Patients Discovered to Have Been Impacted by Bizmatics Data Breach
The Office for Civil Rights has received two further breach reports from healthcare providers impacted by the Bizmatics data breach. Almost 95,000 patients of the two healthcare facilities have potentially had their data accessed by hackers. Southeast Eye Institute P.A, doing business as Eye Associates of Pinellas, has notified 87,314 patients of the breach, while Lafayette Pain Care, PC., has potentially had the data of 7,500 individuals scanned by hackers. Eye Associates of Pinellas was notified by Bizmatics on March 30, 2016., that some of its patients’ data were accessed by unauthorized third parties. The data potentially viewed include patients’ names, telephone numbers, home addresses, dates of birth, health insurance information, and Social Security numbers. Patients affected by the breach had visited Eye Associates of Pinellas prior to November 15, 2015. According to the breach notice posted by Eye Associates of Pinellas, Bizmatics had segregated data to improve security, but the company was unable to determine if the separated data fields had been matched by the...



