$1.55 Million HIPAA Settlement for Lack of BAA and Risk Analysis Failures
The Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights has announced it has reached a settlement with North Memorial Health Care of Minnesota over alleged HIPAA violations from a 2011 data breach. North Memorial has agreed to pay $1,550,000 to OCR to settle the HIPAA violation charges. Following a PHI breach reported on September 27, 2011, OCR conducted an investigation and discovered HIPAA violations that contributed to the cause of a breach of 9,497 patient health records. The investigation revealed that North Memorial had overlooked “Two major cornerstones of the HIPAA Rules,” according to OCR Director Jocelyn Samuels. The data breach involved the theft of a laptop computer from a business associate of North Memorial. The laptop was stolen from the employee’s vehicle, and while the device was password-protected, the ePHI stored on the device had not been encrypted. The business associate, Accretive Health, Inc., had been contracted to perform a number of payment and healthcare operations on behalf of North Memorial. Those operations required Accretive Health to be...
OCR Clarifies How HIPAA Rules Apply to Workplace Wellness Programs
Office for Civil Rights Director Jocelyn Samuels has written a blog post to clear up confusion about how HIPAA Rules apply to workplace wellness programs provided through employer-sponsored group health plans. Workplace wellness programs have become increasingly popular in recent months and more employers are now offering workplace wellness programs to employees to improve their health. Providing workplace wellness programs to employees requires employers to gather health data through health risk assessments and various other means, and those data must be protected under Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act Rules. HIPAA also places severe restrictions on how health data can be used. HIPAA does not apply to all workplace wellness programs, only those that are offered through an employer-sponsored group health plan. Samuels explained in the post that employers are not permitted to disclose any health data for employment-related actions, nor are data allowed to be used for marketing purposes or any other reason not permitted by HIPAA Rules. The HIPAA Security Rule...
Stolen Premier Healthcare Laptop Returned: No PHI Accessed Says Pondurance
When a healthcare laptop is stolen it is exceptionally rare for the device to be recovered. However, Premier Healthcare LLC., has reported that the laptop computer stolen from its billing department on December 31, 2015 has now been recovered. Initially, it was unclear how many patients had been affected by the breach, although an analysis revealed that the laptop computer contained the records of 205,748 individuals. The laptop computer was protected with a password but the data stored on the device were not encrypted. PDF files, spreadsheets, and screenshots containing the protected health information of patients were all potentially accessible. The laptop computer was last seen in the billing department and was believed to have been stolen on December 31; however, more than two months after the device went missing it arrived in the mail. Premier Healthcare reported the device was received in the mail on or before March 7, 2016. It would appear that the individual who took the laptop had second thoughts and returned the device anonymously. However, a data breach may still have...
Laborers Funds Administrative Office of Northern California Reports HIPAA Breach
The Laborers Funds Administrative Office of Northern California has announced it has experienced a HIPAA security incident that has resulted in the protected health information of participants being disclosed to other individuals. The Laborers Funds Administrative Office of Northern California, which manages Northern California Laborers Trust Funds, conducted a mailing on February 17, 2016 to alert participants that they were not responsible for tax or penalty under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act as they had the required minimum level of coverage from the fund. However, a computer error occurred when mailing IRS 1095-B forms to participants which resulted in some individuals receiving correspondence containing data relating to other fund participants and their dependents. The data detailed on the 1095-B forms included Social Security numbers and health plan coverage information along with the full names of other participants and their dependents. In accordance with HIPAA and state regulations, all affected individuals have been sent breach notification letters to...
Lost Flash Drive Exposes Data of Karmanos Cancer Center Patients
An unencrypted flash drive containing the protected health information of 2,808 patients of the Barbara Ann Karmanos Cancer Center has been declared lost. The flash drive had been mailed to Barbara Ann Karmanos Cancer Center but when the package arrived, the flash drive was discovered to be missing. The portable storage device was placed in an envelope and was mailed, which was the last time the device was seen. The hospital has reported that efforts are being made to try to locate the flash drive although the device appears to have been lost in the mail. The flash drive was used to store data as part of a system upgrade. An investigation into the potential privacy breach was launched when the device was discovered to be missing to determine which patients had been affected, and the nature of the data stored on the device. The portable storage device was found to only contain a limited amount of administrative data which included the names of patients, their treating physicians, the name of the hospital where treatment was provided, and unique patient identifiers. No financial...



