Florida Department of Health Notifies Individuals Affected by June 2024 Cyberattack
The Florida Department of Health has started notifying the individuals affected by its June 2024 cyberattack and has confirmed that the attack was detected on June 26, 2023, and involved the exfiltration of sensitive data from a limited number of its systems. A forensic investigation was launched into the attack which confirmed that the unauthorized activity occurred on June 26, 2024. The affected files have been reviewed and it has been confirmed that the stolen data included names, dates of birth, addresses, Social Security Numbers, banking information, credit card information, driver’s license numbers, passport numbers, military identification numbers, Nexus numbers, medical and dental histories, medication/prescription information, provider/doctor/care coordinator names, insurance claim information, insurance coverage information, and passwords. The types of data involved varied from individual to individual and the notifications state the exact types of information involved for each individual. The Department of Health said the affected networks were immediately shut down when...
Iranian Espionage Group Providing Network Access to Ransomware Groups
An Iranian hacking group has been collaborating with ransomware groups to extort organizations in the defense, education, finance, and healthcare sectors. The Pioneer Kitten group (aka Fox Kitten, Parisite, Rubidium, and Lemon Sandstorm) has been active since at least 2017 and is believed to be connected to the Iranian government. The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), and the Department of Defense Cyber Crime Center (DC3) have issued a joint cybersecurity advisory about the group that shares the tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs), Indicators of Compromise (IoCs), and recommended mitigations for hardening defenses. Pioneer Kitten has conducted a high number of computer network intrusions in the United States, with its most recent activity identified in August 2024. The group breaches defenses to gain access to organizations’ networks and then monetizes access, historically by selling domain admin credentials and full domain control privileges on cyber marketplaces and recently by working with affiliates of...
OCR Drops Appeal in AHA Tracking Technology Case
Ten days after filing its notice to appeal a District Court ruling that vacated its tracking technology guidance, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Office for Civil Rights (OCR) decided not to proceed and officially withdrew its notice of appeal. The decision by the HHS to voluntarily drop the appeal will provide HIPAA-regulated entities with clarity over the use of website tracking technologies, which can continue to be used on unauthenticated web pages without the risk of future penalties for HIPAA violations. “The American Hospital Association is pleased that the Office for Civil Rights has decided not to appeal the district court’s decision vacating the new rule adopted in its Online Tracking Technologies Bulletin,” said American Hospital Association (AHA) General Counsel, Chad Golder. “As the AHA repeatedly explained to OCR —both before and after OCR forced the AHA to file its lawsuit — this rule was a gross overreach by the federal government, imposed without any input from healthcare providers or the general public.” Golder went on to say,...
HHS-OIG Audit Suggests 1 in 4 Nursing Homes Are Not Compliant with Infection Preventionist Requirements
An audit by the HHS Office of Inspector General (HHS-OIG) indicates more than one-quarter of nursing homes either did not designate an infection preventionist (IP) or designated an IP who had not been completely trained for the position. Due to the high number of healthcare-associated infections in nursing homes, the significant exposure to infections, and the increased susceptibility of nursing home residents to infections, the HHS Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) issued a final rule in October 2016 stating that infection control is a critical issue. The final rule required nursing homes to establish and maintain an infection prevention and control program (ICIP) that ensures a safe, sanitary, and comfortable environment and to strictly adhere to federal requirements for proper infection prevention and control practices. Infection prevention and control regulations include the requirement to designate an infection preventionist (IP) and for that individual to meet federal requirements for that position. HHS-OIG has conducted previous audits of nursing homes and...
Ransomware Attack on Software Vendor Involved Medical Insurance Information of 954K Individuals
Young Consulting (Connexure), an Atlanta, GA-based vendor that provides software solutions to the employer stop loss marketplace, has fallen victim to a BlackSuit ransomware attack that involved the medical insurance information of 954,177 individuals. The software provided by Young Consulting helps carriers, brokers, and third-party administrators market, underwrite, and administer stop-loss insurance. Stop-loss insurance protects against unexpected losses and is often purchased by businesses and organizations that self-fund their employee benefits plans but do not want to be 100% liable for any losses. Young Consulting started experiencing “technical difficulties” on April 13, 2024. A cybersecurity forensics firm was engaged to assist with the investigation and determine the nature and scope of the incident. The forensic investigation confirmed there had been unauthorized access to its network between April 10, 2024, and April 13, 2024, and during that time, certain files were downloaded from its network. The review of those files is ongoing; however, it has been confirmed that...



