Biden Administration Issues Final Rules to Improve Access to Mental Health Services
The Biden Administration has issued final rules updating the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act of 2008 (MHPAEA) to ensure that Americans with health insurance have access to affordable mental health services. MHPAEA prohibits health insurers and group health plans that provide mental health or substance use disorder (MH/SUD) benefits from imposing barriers on access to MH/SUD benefits that do not apply to medical and surgical benefits. While MHPAEA has helped improve access to mental health services, there is a lack of mental health providers sufficiently covered by health insurance plans, which can require them to pay high out-of-pocket costs for care or prevent them from receiving the care they need. The final rules were issued by the U.S. Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, and the Treasury to address the problem and improve access to mental health services for more than 150 million Americans with private health coverage. The new rules provide additional protections against more restrictive, nonquantitative treatment limitations for MH/SUD benefits...
Service Access & Management Investigating Cyberattack
Service Access & Management, Inc (SAM)., a Reading, PA-based case management service provider for youth and families in Pennsylvania and New Jersey, has warned clients that some of their protected health information may have been compromised in a July 2024 cyberattack. Unauthorized system activity was identified on July 5, 2024, and incident response protocols were initiated. Assisted by independent computer forensics specialists, SAC determined that there had been unauthorized access to its systems. On July 29, 2024, it was confirmed that personal and protected health information had been exposed. The substitute breach notice on the SAM website does not currently state what types of information were exposed. SAM is working on identifying the individuals affected and the exact types of information exposed and will issue notifications when that process has been completed. SAM has confirmed that complimentary credit monitoring and identity theft protection services will be offered to individuals whose Social Security numbers were exposed. To meet breach reporting requirements,...
Critical SonicWall Firewall Vulnerability Actively Exploited by Ransomware Actors
A critical vulnerability in SonicWall firewalls is being exploited by ransomware actors to gain initial access to victims’ networks. The vulnerability was first disclosed by SonicWall on August 22, 2024, and a patch was issued to fix the vulnerability. SonicWall issued an update to its advisory on September 6, 2024, urging customers to upgrade to the latest firmware version and warning them of potential exploitation of the flaw. The improper access control vulnerability was assigned a CVSS severity score of 9.3 and affects the SonicOS management access and SSLVPN. If successfully exploited, a remote attacker can gain unauthorized resource access under specific conditions, causing the firewall to crash. According to SonicWall, the vulnerability affects SonicWall Gen 5 and Gen 6 devices, as well as Gen 7 devices running SonicOS 7.0.1-5035 and older versions. In the September 6, 2024, update, SonicWall confirmed that the SSLVPN feature of its firewalls was also affected. On September 6, 2024, the same day that SonicWall issued its update, Arctic Wolf’s senior threat intelligence...
Maximum Severity Vulnerability Identified in Baxter Connex Health Portal
Two vulnerabilities have been identified in the Baxter Connex Health Portal that, if exploited, could lead to the remote injection of malicious code, the shutdown of the database services, and unauthorized access, modification, and deletion of data from the database. The most serious flaw is an SQL injection vulnerability due to the improper sanitization of values of certain parameters. The vulnerability is tracked as CVE-2024-6795 and has been assigned a maximum CVSS (v3.1) severity score of 10. The vulnerability can be exploited remotely in a low-complexity attack allowing an attacker to run arbitrary SQL queries, access, modify, and delete sensitive data, and/or perform administrative operations including shutting down the database. The second issue is a high-severity improper access control vulnerability – CVE-2024-6796 – that can be exploited to access sensitive patient and clinician information and could also allow the modification or deletion of clinic details. The vulnerability has been assigned a CVSS score of 8.2. Both vulnerabilities were reported to the U.S....
St. Croix Regional Medical Center Settles Lawsuit Alleging Overcharging for Medical Records
Wisconsin-based St. Croix Regional Medical Center has proposed a $225,000 settlement to resolve a lawsuit filed by individuals who alleged the medical center charged them excessive fees for exercising their right to obtain a copy of their health records, above what is permitted under Wisconsin law. According to the lawsuit – Stadler v. St. Croix Regional Medical Center Inc. – patients and persons authorized by patients to obtain a copy of their health records (e.g. attorneys) were overcharged for the requested records. St. Croix Regional Medical Center denied any wrongdoing or liability; however, counsel for the plaintiff and defendant determined that there was a significant risk of continuing the litigation, so the decision was taken to settle the lawsuit. Under the terms of the settlement, any patient who directly or indirectly paid a request, basic, retrieval, certification, or other fee in violation of Wis. Stat. §146.83(3f)(b)(4)-(5) is permitted to submit a claim for compensation of up to 1.5 times the amount of the disputed fees. A person authorized by a patient...



