University of Kansas Sued for Alleged Denial of Emergency Abortion Care
The National Women’s Law Center and Mylissa Farmer have filed a lawsuit against the University of Kansas Health System and the University of Kansas Hospital Authority for failing to provide an emergency abortion, in violation of the Emergency Medical Treatment & Labor Act (EMTALA). EMTALA, part of the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act, was passed in 1986 and requires hospitals that accept payment from the HHS Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) under the Medicare program to provide an appropriate medical screening examination (MSE) for anyone seeking treatment for a medical condition regardless of their citizenship, legal status, or ability to pay. EMTALA prohibits patients requiring emergency medical treatment from being transferred or discharged without their consent or stabilization unless the patient must be transferred to a facility better equipped to provide the required treatment, and compliance is mandatory. The lawsuit relates to an August 2, 2022, visit to an emergency room by plaintiff Mylissa Farmer, who was denied any care at the...
American Medical Response Pays $115K Civil Monetary Penalty for HIPAA Violation
American Medical Response (AMR), a private ambulance company, has paid a $115,200 civil monetary penalty to the HHS’ Office for Civil Rights (OCR) to resolve a violation of the HIPAA Right of Access. AMR failed to provide a patient with timely access to their medical records, taking more than a year to provide the requested records. The HIPAA Right of Access is an important provision of the HIPAA Privacy Rule and requires patients to be provided with a copy of their records, on request, within 30 days of submitting that request. In certain circumstances, a 30-day extension is permitted. The fine relates to American Medical Response Ambulance Service, a subsidiary of American Medical Response and a HIPAA-covered entity. On October 31, 2018, the affected party sent a written request to AMR by fax requesting a copy of her medical records, specifically all billing records pertaining to treatment rendered for a 9/15/2015 injury date, patient balance verification, and all medical records pertaining to treatment rendered for the 9/15/2015 injury. She requested those records be provided in...
Children’s Online Privacy Legislation Overwhelmingly Passed by Senate
The Children and Teens’ Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA 2.0) and the Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA) have been passed by the U.S. Senate this week to better protect children and teens from dangerous online content. These two bills are the most significant children’s privacy bills to be passed by the Senate since the original Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act of 1998 (COPPA), which took effect on April 21, 2000. The main requirements of COPPA were for website operators to obtain parental consent before collecting the personal information of children under 13 years of age, to provide clear and concise privacy policies, and to display a prominent and easy-to-use mechanism for parents to review and delete their child’s personal information. COPPA requires reasonable security measures to be implemented to protect the confidentiality, security, and integrity of children’s personal information, a COPPA compliance officer must be delegated who is responsible for ensuring compliance with COPPA, and employees must be provided with ongoing training on COPPA compliance. COPPA...
Shipping Firm Ordered to Pay $707K After Terminating Employment of Whistleblower for Raising Safety Concerns
The shipping giant, Maersk Line Limited, has been ordered to reinstate a seaman who was terminated after alerting the U.S. Coast Guard about safety concerns on board a Maersk container ship, without first notifying his employer and must pay more than $707,000 in back pay and damages. The man had been working aboard the Safmarine Mafadi, a 958-foot U.S. registered 50,000-ton container ship. In December 2020, he contacted the U.S. Coast Guard and reported several safety concerns, including defective gear for releasing lifeboats; crew members in possession of and potentially consuming alcohol; rusted, corroded, and broken deck sockets that needed replacing or repairing; leaks that were causing flooding in the cargo holds; and that on several occasions, a trainee was left alone and unsupervised on the ship’s watch, including during an incident involving a fuel and oil spill that could potentially have resulted in an environmental spill. In December 2020, when Maersk learned that the employee had reported the safety concerns to the U.S. Coast Guard without first informing the company,...
New Hampshire, Texas, and Oregon Healthcare Providers Fall Victim to Ransomware Attacks
Ransomware groups have conducted attacks on three healthcare organizations: Northeast Rehabilitation Hospital Network in New Hampshire, Coastal Plains Community MHMR Center in Texas, and Sutton Dental Arts in Oregon. Hunters International Claims Responsibility for Northeast Rehabilitation Hospital Network Cyberattack Neuro Rehab Associates, Inc., which does business as Northeast Rehabilitation Hospital Network, and operates 4 New Hampshire inpatient hospitals and more than 25 outpatient rehabilitation facilities in New Hampshire and Massachusetts, has recently disclosed a cyberattack and data breach. The incident was detected on or around May 22, 2204, when suspicious activity was identified in its computer systems. The forensic investigation confirmed that there had been unauthorized access to its network between May 13, 2024, and May 22, 2024, and during that time, files containing patient data may have been acquired. Northeast Rehabilitation Hospital Network said it has not identified any misuse of the data, although the affected patients have been advised to be vigilant against...



