41% of 2024 Third Party Breaches Affected Healthcare Organizations
New research has confirmed that healthcare is the industry most impacted by third-party breaches, accounting for 41.2% of all third-party breaches tracked by the cyber risk intelligence and third-party risk management software provider Black Kite. Increasing digital connectedness in healthcare drives progress but also heightens risk, and threat actors are increasingly taking advantage of systemic vulnerabilities to gain access to healthcare networks, including turning trusted vendor relationships into gateways for disruption and data theft. Black Kite explained that the healthcare industry is particularly vulnerable due to the high value of patient data, the need for constant access to that data, the reliance on third-party vendors, and inherent security challenges within the healthcare ecosystem. Organizations are increasingly reliant on software platforms and third-party tools, but vulnerabilities in those tools can be exploited by threat actors to attack all organizations that rely on those tools, as was demonstrated by the mass exploitation of a zero-day vulnerability in...
Watchdog Organization Calls for Investigations of Crisis Pregnancy Centers Over Potential Privacy Violations
The non-profit civil liberties organization, Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), has written to Attorneys General in Arkansas, Florida, Missouri, and Texas, requesting they open investigations of crisis pregnancy centers (CPCs) in their respective states over potential privacy violations and deceptive business practices. There are currently an estimated 2,750 CPCs in the United States, the majority of which are affiliated with one or more of three organizations: Care Net, Heartbeat International, and the National Institute of Family and Life Advocates. CPCs generally offer pregnancy testing services, counseling, and information, with some also providing limited medical services; however, many CPCs are not licensed medical clinics. CPCs are often connected to religious organizations and have a strong anti-abortion stance and therefore do not offer reproductive healthcare such as abortions or, in some cases, contraception. According to EFF, in 2022, CPCs received $1.4 billion in revenue, including substantial federal and state funds. The letters from EFF follow complaints filed...
HIPAA Training for Physicians
Physicians must receive documented HIPAA training that covers the HIPAA Privacy Rule, HIPAA Security Rule, and HIPAA Breach Notification Rule, is provided during onboarding and repeated annually as an industry best practice, and is supported by ongoing security awareness training so that uses and disclosures of protected health information, HIPAA safeguards, and breach response requirements are consistently followed in clinical and operational workflows. HIPAA Training Obligations for Physicians Under the HIPAA Privacy Rule, a HIPAA Covered Entity must train all members of its workforce on the organization’s policies and procedures related to protected health information, as necessary and appropriate for them to carry out their functions. Physicians are workforce members when they are employed by, under contract with, or otherwise operate under the direct control of a HIPAA Covered Entity, whether or not they are paid. Under the HIPAA Security Rule, HIPAA Covered Entities and Business Associates must implement a security awareness and training program for all workforce members,...
HHS Delays Effective Date of HIPAA Final Rule Implementing Modified Retail Pharmacy Standard
In December 2024, the Department of Health and Human Services published a final rule in the Federal Register modifying the National Council for Prescription Drug Programs (NCPDP) Retail Pharmacy Standards and the Medicaid Pharmacy Subrogation Standard. The effective date for those modifications was initially set as February 11, 2025; however, the HHS has now delayed the effective date until April 14, 2025. The final rule adopted updated versions of the retail pharmacy standards for electronic transactions for health care claims or equivalent encounter information; eligibility for a health plan; referral certification and authorization; and coordination of benefits, and the adoption of a modified standard for the Medicaid pharmacy subrogation transaction. The delay to the effective and compliance dates is due to President Trump’s January 20, 2025, Presidential memorandum, titled “Regulatory Freeze Pending Review.” Dorothy A. Fink, Acting Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, said the 60-day postponement of the effective date was made “for the purpose of reviewing...
HIPAA Compliance for Psychologists
In most cases, HIPAA compliance for psychologists consists of complying with all applicable HIPAA Administrative Simplification Regulations when a psychologist is a qualifying sole practitioner or in charge of a qualifying practice, or complying with an organization’s HIPAA policies and procedures when a psychologist is a member of a HIPAA covered organization’s workforce. However, there are scenarios in which a psychologist may qualify as a hybrid entity, or when they may work as a sole practitioner in an affiliated entity but are not solely responsible for HIPAA compliance. It may also be possible that a psychologist does not qualify as a HIPAA covered entity, but still has to comply with applicable HIPAA regulations when working for a covered organization as a business associate. In addition, psychologists may have to comply with other federal or state regulations that preempt HIPAA. These can relate to permissible disclosures of certain types of records (i.e., substance use disorder records) or obtaining affirmative consent before collecting, processing, or sharing sensitive...



