53 Percent of Physicians Use a Smartphone, Tablet and Computer at Work
Doctors are clearly embracing new technology if the results of a recent survey are representative of the nation as a whole. Epocrates, a mobile reference material vendor, has recently conducted a survey on 1,063 mid-level practitioners and physicians asking them about the use of mobile devices in the workplace. The survey results show a marked increase in the usage of all mobile devices, with a particularly telling statistic being the percentage of doctors who are using all three types of device categorized in the study: Smartphones, tablets, and desktop/laptops. These “digital omnivores” as they are referred to in the study have increased from 28% in 2012 to 53% this year. As more healthcare providers implement BYOD schemes, or provide devices to healthcare professionals, the number of digital omnivores in healthcare is expected to increase, and significantly so according to Epocrates researchers. They predict the number will grow to 82% over the course of the coming year. Oncologists Most Likely to use Smartphones, Tablets and Desktops at Work Oncologists were the most...
Cogent Healthcare Contractor HIPAA Error puts Patient PHI in Search Engines
Cogent Healthcare has issued a statement announcing that M2ComSys, a contractor used for transcription services, was responsible for a HIPAA breach that exposed the data of 32,000 patients across America. The data breach not only left medical information accessible to unauthorized third parties, but it also saw some of that protected health information indexed by Google. This is the second reportable HIPAA data breach suffered by Cogent Healthcare, according to the Office for Civil Rights. The security breach occurred between May 5, 2013 and June 24, 2013, with data being made available due to a firewall not being activated. Without the firewall in place there were no restrictions as to who could access the data, which violates HIPAA Privacy and Security Rules. The data included personally identifiable information, medical record numbers, medical histories and patient contact details, although there were no Social Security Numbers present in the data. M2ComSys was employed to transcribe notes made by physicians and held the data on what it believed to be a secure server, although...
Fort Worth HIPAA Breach Exposes 277K Patient Records
A business associate of the Texas Health Harris Methodist Fort Worth hospital has caused one of the biggest HIPAA breaches to date and the largest exposure of patient PHI to occur this year. This is the third major data security breach to affect Texas Health hospitals. In accordance with HIPAA Breach Notification Rules, the hospital is now in the process of notifying all 277,000 of its patients to inform them of the breach. Victims of data breaches must be allowed the opportunity to take the necessary precautions to prevent losses or damage being suffered as a result of PHI disclosed. The data exposed includes medical health information and personal identifiers such as patient names, dates of birth, telephone numbers, home addresses, medical record IDs, clinical information and health insurance details. Some Social Security numbers were also present in the data. The transfer of Electronic PHI from HIPAA-covered institutions to their business associates is a security risk which should be identified as part of the Risk Analysis which must be undertaken to comply with HIPAA...
Cedars-Sinai Hospital Fires Six Over Inappropriate Patient PHI Access
Cedars-Sinai Hospital in Los Angeles was chosen by reality TV star Kim Kardashian and Rapper Kayne West as the place to have their daughter delivered. Their baby was born on June 15th, but three days later some members of staff started accessing the medical records of one of the patient from the hospital. The hospital announced that the records were accessed over a period of one week. Six staff gained access to medical records which they were not authorized to view, with one individual accessing 14 patient records and the other five accessing the record of a single patient. The hospital did not confirm the names of the patients affected by this security breach and according to the L.A Times, neither Kardashian nor West was available for comment on the matter. The hospital did confirm that all patients affected by the breach had been contacted and notified of the unauthorized access and the hospital did not believe that any crimes had been committed. Cedars-Sinai operates strict policies to protect confidential medical records and the persons who accessed PHI of patients did not...
Wellpoint Agrees to $1.7 Million Settlement for HIPAA Violations
Wellpoint is one of the largest providers of Affiliated Health Plans, with almost 36 million policy holders across the United States. Between October 23, 2009 and March 7, 2010 part of its database of policy holders was accessible to unauthorized individuals. The security breach was brought to the attention of Wellpoint in March 2010 when a lawsuit was filed in California by an applicant who discovered it was possible to access the electronic Protected Health Information of Wellpoint policy holders. Wellpoint took rapid action to restrict access and began an investigation into the data security breach. It determined that the personal health data was accessible to unauthorized third parties although it was limited to 31,700 individuals. Names, addresses and contact details were accessible along with health information and social security numbers. HIPAA demands that breach notifications are sent to all those affected by a security breach to enable them to take action to mitigate any damage caused. The company complied with these regulations and sent notifications informing all those...



