Chicago Hospital Council Files Lawsuit to Prevent Deletion of Patient Data
A lawsuit has been filed against Sandlot Solutions, Inc., and its parent company Santa Rosa Consulting by the MCHC-Chicago Hospital Council in an attempt to prevent the deletion of more than 2 million patient records from Sandlot’s servers. The MCHC-Chicago Hospital Council (MCHC), which includes over 30 area hospitals, operates the MetroChicago Health Information Exchange (HIE). The HIE was formed to allow all participating hospitals to quickly and easily share patient health information and ensure that up-to-date medical records of patients could always be obtained by doctors and healthcare professionals. The HIE contains patient data collected over the past seven years. The HIE is hosted by healthcare information technology company Sandlot Solutions, Inc. On March 28, 2016., Sandlot notified MCHC that it would be winding down its operations and would soon be going out of business. Sandlot is alleged to have shut down access to the HIE a day later. MCHC was also advised that Sandlot would be deleting all HIE data from its servers within 24 hours of providing the council with a...
Vail Valley Medical Center Notifies 3,118 Patients of Unauthorized PHI Disclosure
Vail Valley Medical Center (VVMC) is in the process of notifying 3,118 patients of the inappropriate disclosure of some of their protected health information (PHI). A physical therapist formerly employed at Howard Head Sports Medicine was discovered to have copied the PHI of patients and taken the data to his new employer. Prior to leaving employment, the physical therapist downloaded patient PHI onto a USB drive on two separate occasions. VVMC discovered the former employee’s HIPAA violations on February 16, 2016. An internal investigation revealed that the physical therapist had inappropriately accessed patient PHI and copied data on December 1, and December 30, 2015. No Social Security numbers, credit card numbers, bank account details, dates of birth, or addresses were taken, although the former employee did obtain patient names, patient ages, dates of service, amounts paid for medical services, and details of medical diagnoses, conditions, treatments, functional test outcomes, and progress information. Patients affected by the breach had previously attended the Vail Valley...
Mail Delivery Truck Stolen: 2400 Inland Empire Health Plan Members’ PHI Exposed
Kaiser Permanente is in the process of notifying 2,400 members of the Inland Empire Health Plan of the theft of Evidence of Coverage handbooks from a mail delivery truck. The names and addresses of plan members were also exposed. The data, which are classed as Protected Health Information under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, were stolen from a mail delivery truck at some point between March 12 and March 14, 2016. In a breach of Kaiser Permanente’s vendor mail delivery policies, the truck containing the handbooks was left unattended in a non-secure area. It would appear that the delivery truck had been left in a parking lot in the city of Santa Clarita, CA., over the weekend. Thieves gained entry to the vehicle and drove it to an unspecified location where they robbed the vehicle of its contents. The theft was reported to law enforcement in Santa Clarita and the vehicle was subsequently recovered, but not the Evidence of Coverage handbooks. The handbooks were for California Medi-Cal members in Southern California. Kaiser Permanente does not believe the...
Flash Drive Theft Exposes PHI of 2700 Oneida Health Center Dental Clinic Patients
An unencrypted flash drive containing the protected health information of 2,700 patients of the Oneida Health Center Dental Clinic has been discovered to be missing. The portable storage device is believed to have been stolen internally and an investigation into the theft is still being conducted by the dental clinic. Local law enforcement was also notified and an investigation was conducted, although the flash drive has not been recovered. The drive was stolen from the Oneida Health Center on the Oneida Reservation at 525 Airport Drive on February 17, 2016. The device contained a limited amount of patient data including patient names, patient identification numbers, and dental insurance identification numbers. Patients affected by the breach had visited the dental clinic between February 2, 2015 and February 17, 2016. No Social Security numbers, dates of birth, or financial information were stored on the device. Patients have now been notified of the breach by mail in accordance with Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act Rules. Oneida Health Center has no reason to...
Wyoming Medical Center Phishing Attack Exposes PHI of 3,184 Patients
A phishing attack on Wyoming Medical Center of Casper in February has resulted in the exposure of 3,184 patients’ protected health information. Two employees clicked on links contained in phishing emails and compromised their accounts. The first employee to fall for the phishing scam clicked on the link on February 22, 2016, with the second employee falling for the scam three days later. Wyoming Medical Center quickly became aware that email accounts had been compromised because the accounts were used by the attackers to send spam emails to other hospital employees. According to a statement released by hospital spokeswoman Kristy Bleizeffer, access to the email accounts was gained for 15 minutes only. As soon as the intrusion was discovered, IT staff started updating passwords to lock out the attackers. An investigation into the breach did not uncover any evidence to suggest emails were accessed by the attacker. Due to the limited time that the email accounts were compromised it is unlikely that the attackers succeeded in gaining access to the PHI of patients. An investigation into...



