Data Breach at Rocky Mountain Associated Physicians Affects 50,000 Patients
Rocky Mountain Associated Physicians has reported a data breach affecting more than 50,000 patients. Data breaches have also been announced by Aroostook Mental Health Center and the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services. Rocky Mountain Associated Physicians The Salt Lake City, Utah-based surgical and medical weight loss specialists, Rocky Mountain Associated Physicians, have recently announced a security incident involving unauthorized access to the protected health information of up to 50,640 current and former patients. Rocky Mountain said its forensic investigation determined on February 2, 2026, that an advanced threat actor accessed certain systems, including its patient database. The compromised database included individuals’ names, dates of birth, contact information, Social Security numbers, medical record numbers, diagnosis and treatment information, and health insurance information. For some individuals, financial information was compromised, including their debit/credit card numbers and PINs. Third-party cybersecurity experts were engaged to review the security of...
Medical Group Announces PHI Exposure Due to Unencrypted Emails
CardioFit Medical Group has discovered emails containing protected health information were inadvertently sent without encryption. Interventional Pain Center in Tennessee has identified unauthorized access to an email account containing PHI. CardioFit Medical Group, California CardioFit Medical Group, Inc., a California-based medical group providing acute, chronic, and preventive cardiology care, has started notifying certain patients about the exposure of some of their protected health information. The inadvertent HIPAA violation was identified on February 17, 2026, when CardioFit learned that patient information had been sent via emails that had not been encrypted. The emails were sent in January and February 2026 and were found to contain a limited amount of patient information. Highly sensitive information such as Social Security numbers, bank account details, or credit card information was not included in the emails; however, the emails did contain names, demographic information, and in certain cases, limited clinical information such as diagnoses and health insurance...
Kettering Health Ransomware Attack: 1.7 Million Individuals Affected
In May 2025, the Ohio health system Kettering Adventist Healthcare (Kettering Health) experienced a ransomware attack. The attack was detected on May 20, 2025, and the investigation determined that a ransomware group first accessed its network on April 9, 2025, and retained access until May 20, 2025. The Interlock ransomware group claimed responsibility for the attack and added Kettering Health to its dark web data leak site. Interlock claimed to have exfiltrated 941 GB of data and proceeded to leak the stolen data when the ransom was not paid. The HHS’ Office for Civil Rights was informed on July 21, 2025, that protected health information had been compromised in the attack. OCR was provided with a placeholder estimate of at least 501 individuals, as it had yet to be determined how many individuals had been affected. It took until October 2025 for Kettering Health to confirm the types of patient data compromised in the attack, although the file review was still ongoing at the time. The HIPAA Journal has been monitoring the OCR data breach portal for any update on the number...
OSHA Updates Heat-Related Hazards National Emphasis Program
On April 10, 2026, two days after the Occupational Safety and Health Administration’s (OSHA) Heat National Emphasis Program (NEP) expired, OSHA announced an update to the NEP. The updated NEP is effective immediately and will remain in place for five years after the effective date, unless superseded by an updated directive; however, there are no indications that OSHA’s proposed national heat illness and injury prevention rule will progress to a final rule any time soon. The NEP – Outdoor and Indoor Heat-Related Hazards was originally issued on April 8, 2022, and was due to expire on April 8, 2025; however, it was extended for a further year in January 2025 by the Biden Administration, shortly before the administration change. The one-year extension was based on OSHA enforcement data. Between April 2022 and December 2024, OSHA conducted approximately 7,000 heat-related inspections, issued 60 citations for violations of the OSH Act related to heat hazards, issued almost 1,400 hazard alerts, and removed around 1,400 employees from hazardous heat conditions. After analyzing OSHA...
CMS Launches First Wave of Health Tech Ecosystem Health Information Sharing and Access Tools
The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has launched the first wave of Health Tech Ecosystem tools as part of its initiative to improve interoperability and patient access to their own health information. The CMS launched its Health Technology Ecosystem initiative in July 2025 to boost health data sharing through partnerships with major healthcare and technology firms, including Google, Amazon, Epic, and UnitedHealth Group. The initiative focuses on encouraging the adoption of the CMS Interoperability Framework, which allows patients to access their own healthcare data on any network using the digital health apps of their choice, and to increase the availability of digital health tools for care navigation and chronic disease management. At launch, more than 60 health tech firms had pledged to participate in the initiative. One of the key aims of the initiative is to allow patients to access all of their healthcare data quickly and easily, including medical records, prior authorizations, explanation of benefits, and claims,...



