Phishing Email Results in 108,000-Record Data Breach at Nebraska Life Insurer
United of Omaha Life Insurance Company in Nebraska has confirmed that a response to a phishing email has resulted in a breach of the protected health information of 107,894 individuals. The breach was detected on April 23, 2024, when anomalous activity was identified in an employee’s email account. United of Omaha observed unauthorized access to the account by a third party and blocked access to the account by changing the employee’s Microsoft account passwords and blocking and reporting the domain associated with the attack. The forensic investigation confirmed that access was gained to the account following a phishing campaign targeting its employees and one of those employees responded to the email and disclosed their credentials. The investigation confirmed that there was unauthorized access to the account between April 21, and April 23, 2024, and that the activity was limited to that account and no other systems or networks were compromised. The email account was reviewed to identify the types of information that were potentially viewed or stolen, and that process was...
What is the False Claims Act in Healthcare?
The False Claims Act in healthcare is a law that can be used by government agencies to take enforcement action against contractors who knowingly submit false claims, cause another to submit false claims, or knowingly make a false record or statement to get a false claim paid by a federal healthcare program. False Claims Act healthcare complaints can also be filed against contractors who fail to return Medicare and Medicaid overpayments. The False Claims Act was enacted in 1863 “to prevent and punish frauds upon the Government of the United States”. The Act was introduced with the intention of stopping dishonest contractors selling faulty supplies and equipment to Union troops during the Civil War. Significantly, the Act included a “qui tam” provision which permits private citizens to sue dishonest contractors on behalf of the government and retain a percentage of the proceeds. Despite the availability of the Act, successive Attorneys General mostly ignored it – preferring instead to pursue criminal prosecutions against dishonest contractors rather than civil prosecutions. This...
Average Cost of a Data Breach Rises to $4.88M; Falls to $9.77M in Healthcare
The average cost of a data breach has risen to $4.88 million with the highest breach costs at critical infrastructure entities. The costliest breaches were at healthcare organizations. Healthcare data breach costs fell by 10.6% year-over-year from $10.93 million in 2023 to $9.77 million in 2024. The reduction in costs was not enough for healthcare to lose its place at the top of the list of the costliest breaches, a position the sector has held since 2011. The 10% increase in average data breach costs was the largest annual increase since the pandemic, with the rise attributed to increasingly disruptive cyberattacks and higher post-breach customer support costs. The disruption caused is extending the after-effects of breaches, with a full recovery taking longer than 100 days for most breached organizations, although only 12% of breached organizations were able to fully recover. According to IBM, in 2024, 70% of breached organizations reported suffering significant or very significant disruption due to a breach. 63% of breached organizations reported passing on data breach costs to...
HIPAA-Compliant Data Centers
The resources required to set up and maintain an on-premises data center are considerable, so it is no surprise that many healthcare providers are turning to the cloud and are using third-party HIPAA data centers to cut costs. The healthcare industry is under increasing pressure to improve efficiency and patient privacy protections while reducing healthcare costs. The data center is one area where all three can be achieved. By outsourcing the data center, privacy and security protections can be improved, the physical space occupied by the in-house data center can be put to profit-making use, and costs can be significantly reduced. HIPAA-compliant data centers can be set up to provide the same or greater level of performance as in-house data centers, the only difference being where the data is stored. Rather than use in house IT equipment that is expensive to purchase and maintain, healthcare providers just rent the capacity from a cloud service provider. The service provider is responsible for the hardware and infrastructure that supports their data centers, as well as implementing...
HIPAA-Compliant Cloud Hosting
Healthcare organizations have a tremendous amount to gain from moving their applications and infrastructure to the cloud, and an increasing number are turning to HIPAA cloud hosting companies to provide the infrastructure and security to allow patient information to be moved from on-premise applications to the cloud. HIPAA and Cloud Computing There has been a proliferation of cloud computing solutions in recent years, which have been widely adopted across all industry sectors. Healthcare organizations were slow to embrace the cloud at first, but now most healthcare companies are running multiple cloud applications and an increasing number are now using cloud-based infrastructure and cloud-data centers. The cloud has allowed healthcare organizations to improve efficiency, become more agile, and reduce costs. Healthcare providers, health plans, healthcare clearinghouses, and business associates of HIPAA-covered entities are permitted to move their data centers and IT infrastructure to the cloud, but before any electronic protected health information (ePHI) is transferred outside the...



