Methodist Hospital in Lockdown After Ransomware Attack
Methodist Hospital in Henderson, KY., is currently in lockdown after a ransomware attack. The hospital has declared an “internal state of emergency,” after critical files were copied and locked. The hospital responded to the cyberattack quickly and was able to contain the malware, although as a result of the lockdown access to electronic communications and web-based systems remains limited. The malicious software was inadvertently installed on the network resulting in files containing patient data being copied and encrypted. According to a statement issued by Methodist COO David Park, “the hackers have copied patients records and locked those copies. They’ve deleted the originals.” Methodist Hospital was able to activate a backup system. Normal operations are continuing at the hospital without any interruption to patient services, but the issue has yet to be resolved and the main network remains locked. The FBI has been notified and an investigation into the cyberattack has commenced. Methodist Hospital is working with the FBI to determine the best way to resolve the issue. A...
Non-Compliant Hospital Pager Use Persists
Communicating protected health information (PHI) over unsecured networks is not permitted under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), which means pagers cannot be used to send PHI unless messages are encrypted. Encryption alone is not sufficient to ensure compliance with HIPAA. Not only must messages be encrypted to prevent interception, there must be a means of verifying the identity of the user. User authentication is essential, as there is no guarantee that a message containing PHI will be received by the intended recipient. If a pager is lost, stolen, or is left unattended, PHI could potentially be accessed by an unauthorized individual. It is also necessary to implement controls to automatically log off users and allow messages to be remotely erased in the event that a pager is lost or stolen. Due to the cost implications of applying these safeguards, and the difficult in doing so, many hospitals implement policies that prohibit the transmission of PHI over the pager network. If PHI needs to be communicated, a pager message is sent and the recipient...
OCR Announces $3.9 Million Settlement with Feinstein Institute for Medical Research
The Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights has announced it has settled potential HIPAA violations with Feinstein Institute for Medical Research for $3.9 million. This is the second largest settlement amount agreed with OCR, behind the $4.8 million settlement with New York and Presbyterian Hospital and Columbia University in 2014. However, this is the largest amount paid by a single covered entity, beating last year’s 3.5 million settlement with Triple S Management Corporation. The news comes a day after OCR announced another large settlement – The $1.55 million paid by North Memorial Health Care. Feinstein Institute for Medical Research is a not-for-profit biomedical research institute based in New York. Feinstein is sponsored by Northwell Health, Inc., the new name for North Shore Long Island Jewish Health System, a large 21-hospital and 450-practice health system based in Manhasset, NY. The settlement stems from an investigation into a breach of 13,000 research participants’ data in 2012. As was the case with North Memorial Health Care, the breach...
6,893 Patient Records Exposed Due to Centers Plan for Healthy Living Laptop Theft
Centers Plan for Healthy Living, a Staten Island NY-based managed care organization, has announced that a laptop computer containing the protected health information of Medicare/Medicaid recipients has been stolen from its corporate offices. The laptop theft was discovered on January 4, 2016., with the device believed to have been taken on or around January 1. Following the discovery of the theft, Centers Plan conducted an investigation and determined that the laptop may have contained a file containing data relating to 6,893 Medicare and Medicaid recipients. No Social Security numbers, financial information, credit card numbers, health data, or other highly sensitive information were contained in the file, although some individuals have had their Medicare and/or Medicaid numbers exposed. Other data believed to have been contained in the file include full names, dates of birth, and home addresses. The theft was immediately reported to law enforcement although the laptop computer has not been recovered. Centers Plan does not believe the laptop was stolen for the data stored on the...
EHR of Geauga Medical Center Improperly Accessed by Employee
A former employee of University Hospitals Geauga Medical Center in Chardon, OH., has been discovered to have improperly accessed the protected health information of 677 patients. An internal review of access logs was conducted after UH discovered a pattern of “unusual access” of its electronic health record system. The investigation, completed on January 13, 2016., revealed that an employee had accessed patient health records without any legitimate reason for doing so. The information accessed included patient names, medical record numbers, dates of birth, details of prescribed medications, and other data recorded during patient visits to Geauga Medical Center. The employee first started inappropriately accessing patient health records on August 15, 2015, with periodic access continuing until January 3, 2016. No reason was given as to why the individual had accessed the data, although UH does not believe the records were accessed with a view to committing identity theft. UH has not received any reports of inappropriate use of the data or of patients coming to harm as a result of...



