New York Hospital Fined $2.2 Million for Unauthorized Filming of Patients
The Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights (OCR) has fined New York Presbyterian Hospital (NYP) $2.2 million for allowing patients to be filmed for a TV show without obtaining prior permission from the patients. In 2011, an ABC crew was permitted to film inside NYP facilities for the show “NY Med” featuring Dr. Mehmet Oz. A number of patients were filmed including a dying man and another patient who was seriously distressed. The footage was aired in 2012. Authorization to film had been given by NYP, although not all patients gave their consent to be filmed. One of the patients was Mark Chanko. He had been rushed to hospital after being hit by a sanitation truck. He was filmed receiving treatment from chief surgery resident Sebastian Schubl. Despite the best efforts of Schubl, Chanko died from the injuries sustained in the accident. Chanko had not given NYP permission to film him. To hide his identity ABC used blurring and voice alteration software. This did not prevent the crew from viewing Chanko’s PHI and it was not sufficient to hide his identity from...
Patient Treatment Centers of America Notifies Patients of Hacking Incident
Patient Treatment Centers of America (PTCOA) and Interventional Surgery Institute (ISI) are notifying patients of a security breach suffered by third party vendor Bizmatics. Bizmatics operates PrognoCIS; an electronic health record and practice management tool used by a number of large number of healthcare organizations including PTCOA. PTCOA uses PrognoCIS to store and organize patient medical files. Earlier this year PTCOA/ISI were notified by Bizmatics of a cyberattack that resulted in hackers gaining access to the company’s data servers. Data stored by PrognoCIS EHR software were potentially compromised in the attack. The information potentially accessed includes patients’ medical records (visit information, diagnoses, treatment data etc.), personal information such as names and addresses, health insurance information, Driver’s License numbers, other ID numbers, and in some cases, Social Security numbers. According to the breach notice submitted to the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights, 19,397 PTCOA patients have been affected by the Bizmatics...
Raleigh Orthopaedic Clinic Settles for 750K for Lack of BAA
The Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights (OCR) has announced a settlement has been reached with Raleigh Orthopaedic Clinic, P.A., of North Carolina over alleged violations of HIPAA Rules. Raleigh Orthopaedic has agreed to pay OCR $750,000 for failing to enter into a business associate agreement (BAA) with a vendor before handing over the protected health information (PHI) of 17,300 patients in 2013. OCR launched an investigation into a data breach reported by Raleigh Orthopaedic on April 30, 2013. Raleigh Orthopaedic had agreed to provide a potential business associate (BA) with X-ray films in order to have images transferred to a digital format. The company was allowed to recycle the original films to recover the silver after the images had been transferred to an electronic format. However, the agreement was reached over the telephone and no BAA was obtained. Prior to providing the company with the X-Rays Raleigh Orthopaedic should have issued a BAA and obtained a signed copy. The BAA should have detailed the responsibilities the company had to ensure...
A Decade of Data Breaches: Healthcare Industry Data Breaches Have Exposed 176.5 Million Records
For more than a decade the Identity Theft Resource Center (ITRC) has been keeping track of data breaches in the United States. The ITRC data breach list has been growing steadily over the years, although in recent years the number of data breaches has grown substantially. This week a new milestone was reached. The total number of data breaches recorded by ITRC has exceeded 6,000. More than 851 million records have been exposed since ITRC first started keeping records in 2005, and the last 10 years have seen a 397% increase in data breaches. ITRC’s analysis of data breaches covers all industry sectors. The organization’s analysts determined that 32.7 percent of data breaches resulted in the exposure of Social Security numbers – or 245.2 million records. Since 2010, 142 million Social Security numbers have been exposed in data breaches. Healthcare industry data breaches accounted for 16.6% of Social Security number exposures. ITRC figures show that healthcare industry breaches have resulted in the exposure of over 176.5 million records since the organization first started tracking...
PHI of Alabama CVS Pharmacy Patients Exposed
The theft of a laptop computer from a business associate of CVS pharmacy has resulted in the exposure of customers’ protected health information. The privacy breach affects certain patients who have previously filled out prescriptions at a single CVS pharmacy in Alabama – The CVS pharmacy at 8370 Highway 31 in Calera. Data stored on the laptop computer include the names of patients along with contact telephone numbers, home addresses, details of the prescriptions provided, and numbers and dispensing dates. No Social Security numbers or financial information were exposed. The theft occurred on March 16, 2016., and CVS was notified of the data breach on March 22. All affected patients have now been notified of the privacy breach by mail. The laptop theft was reported to the Indianapolis Police Department although the laptop computer has not been recovered. CVS requires its vendors to encrypt all patient information although in this case encryption was not used. This was a breach of the vendor’s contractual obligations, although the incident was not deemed to be severe enough to...



