Apple to Recruit HIPAA Expert as Privacy Counsel
Apple is seeking a Privacy Counsel with extensive experience in healthcare privacy and a thorough understanding of HIPAA regulations. The new position confirms that Apple is planning on developing its products to be more valuable to healthcare professionals and patients, and that the company is intent on making more of a mark in the healthcare sector. The new recruit will be required to work on cutting edge projects, providing essential input on privacy and security, working on privacy by design reviews, supporting compliance and auditing frameworks, drafting policies and procedures to ensure compliance with privacy laws, and assisting with privacy complaints and breaches. The individual will also play a major part in designing privacy solutions for Apple products. The new position could indicate Apple is intent on developing HIPAA-compliant apps or may be working on a HIPAA-compliant backend for its frameworks to enable patient data to be stored and transmitted securely, in accordance with HIPAA Rules. Apple has already developed products and frameworks for monitoring patient...
ACLU Claims Myriad Genetics Violated HIPAA Rules by Withholding Genetic Data
Late last week, a complaint was filed with the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights by the American Civil Liberties Union after Myriad Genetics refused to provide four patients with copies of their full genetic records – an alleged breach of the HIPAA Privacy Rule. The patients in question had undergone genetic tests to assess hereditary risk for bladder, breast, and ovarian cancer. Myriad provided the patients with details of the genetic factors which were deemed to be significant and useful for healthcare providers. However, the data provided to the patients did not include information about all of the genetic variants Myriad’s testing had uncovered. The patients requested copies of all of their genetic data that was held by Myriad Genetics, including the genetic variants that Myriad deemed not to pose a risk to the patients. Myriad refused to provide copies saying the patients were not entitled to copies of the withheld data. It was claimed that the withheld data was not part of the designated record set which Myriad is required to provide to patients...
OCR Clears Up Confusion About the Charging of Flat Fees for Copies of PHI
Earlier this year the Office for Civil Rights issued guidance for healthcare providers and health plans on the general right of patients to obtain copies of their protected health information on request. The HIPAA Privacy Rule allows patients to obtain one or more designated record sets which a covered entity holds and maintains. By obtaining copies of their PHI, patients can take control of their own healthcare and well-being. Providing copies of PHI to patients involves a cost to the covered entity, such as the time taken to obtain and copy records and prepare summaries, the cost of paper and printing if record sets are supplied in physical form, the cost of media devices for electronic copies of PHI, and the cost of mailing records to patients if they are not collected in person. Covered entities are permitted to charge patients for providing copies of their PHI, which was explained in the OCR guidance; however, based on the questions submitted by covered entities there appeared to be some confusion over allowable charges, in particular regarding the charging of flat rate fees...
Kansas Heart Hospital Ransomware Attack: Ransom Paid, Second Demand Issued
As last week’s Kansas Heart Hospital ransomware attack clearly demonstrates, paying a ransom may not necessarily result in decryption keys being supplied by attackers to allow files to be unlocked. Ransomware Claims Another Healthcare Victim This year a number of healthcare organizations have had vital data locked by malicious file-encrypting software. In February, Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center felt there was little alternative but to pay a ransom to attackers to obtain decryption keys to unlock files that had been locked with ransomware. The attackers issued a Bitcoin ransom demand of approximately $17,000. Upon paying the ransom, the medical center was provided with a security key for each of the devices that had been infected. Other healthcare providers have also been attacked this year. MedStar Health was reportedly issued a 45 Bitcoin ($19,000) ransom demand, although the ransom was not paid, instead files were recovered from backups. Other attacked healthcare providers were also able to avoid paying a ransom and recovered their locked files by restoring their systems...
Engineer Indicted on Charges of Trade Secret Theft from Medical Device Companies
The United States Department of Justice has charged an engineer with the theft and possession of trade secrets belonging to two medical device manufacturers. 43-year old Wenfeng Lu of Irvine, California, was indicted on 12 charges by a grand jury on Wednesday this week. Lu is alleged to have stolen proprietary trade secures from EV3 Covidien while employed at the company between January 2009 and October 2011, and from Edwards Lifesciences Corp., where he was employed between November, 2011 and November, 2012. Lu is alleged to have stolen information and emailed the confidential data to his personal email account. It has also been alleged that Lu took photographs of equipment and copied company reports, presentations, emails, and test results. Lu visited the People’s Republic of China (PRC) on multiple occasions after obtaining data. It is alleged that Lu was attempting to set up his own company with associates in PRC and planned to use the trade secrets to manufacture medical devices in PRC. Lu was arrested by the FBI in 2012 while preparing to board a plane bound for PRC. Lu was...



