Is Proton Mail HIPAA Compliant?
Proton Mail is HIPAA compliant and can be used by covered entities and business associates to send encrypted emails containing PHI to other Proton users, share files via Proton Drive, and take advantage of the sharable Proton Calendar. However, there can be compliance issues when sending emails to non-Proton Mail users. Proton Mail offers mail, storage, and VPN services, and claims to be “the world’s largest end-to-end encrypted email service”. The “end-to-end” part of the claim does a lot of heavy lifting because emails are only fully encrypted between Proton Mail users. If you send an encrypted email to a (say) Outlook user, you have to set a password for the recipient to open the email. Nonetheless, Proton Mail is an attractive option for businesses operating in regulated industries because of its zero-knowledge model and advanced privacy protections. It is also fairly easy to configure (compared to – for example – Microsoft365) and it is possible to “bridge” accounts between the Proton Mail client and third-party email service providers. Do Covered Entities Need...
Singing River Health System: 895,000 Individuals Affected by August 2023 Ransomware Attack
Singing River Health System in Mississippi suffered a Rhysida ransomware attack in August 2023, which was initially reported to the HHS’ Office for Civil Rights as affecting 501 individuals, as the number of affected individuals had yet to be determined. In December 2023, the total was revised to 252,890 individuals; however, the data breach has turned out to be much worse than previously thought. In a recent notification to the Maine Attorney General, Singing River Health System provided a revised victim count of 895,204 individuals. Click for further information. “SMEs like Singing River Health System are the most vulnerable to cyber-attacks. Unlike large enterprises with massive cybersecurity budgets and dedicated cybersecurity teams, SMEs are exposed to the same threats with a fraction of the resources,” Dror Liwer, co-founder of cybersecurity company Coro told The HIPAA Journal. “In a recent study we conducted with 500 SME cybersecurity professionals, 73% said they missed or ignored critical alerts. That’s not because they don’t want to do their jobs, but because...
OSHA Cites Circles of Care for Failing to Protect Employees from Patient Violence
The Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has cited Circles of Care for failing to protect its employees from patient violence. This is the third time in the past 5 years that Circles of Care has been investigated by OSHA after workers were seriously injured or killed due to violent attacks by patients. Circles of Care is a Florida-based operator of multiple psychiatric and rehabilitation facilities that provides mental health, alcohol, drug abuse, and related services. OSHA previously investigated Circles of Care on two occasions in 2020, once after the fatal shooting of a counselor by a former patient and another after an alleged assault at its Harbor Pines facility in Melbourne in 2020. The latest OSHA investigation was launched on November 7, 2023, to assess compliance after an employee was hospitalized following a violent attack by a patient two days previously. A patient attacked a mental health technician at a nurse’s workstation at its Sheridan West Unit in Melbourne using a mental hole punch, causing injuries to the face, neck,...
New Jersey Dermatology Practice Suffers 380,000-Record Data Breach
Morristown, NJ-based Affiliated Dermatologists & Dermatologic Surgeons (ADDS) has announced a major breach of patient data. On March 5, 2024, ADDS found a ransom note on its network that claimed its network had been breached and data had been stolen. ADDS notified its third-party IT provider and brought in cybersecurity specialists to investigate and verify the threat actor’s claims and determined that there had been unauthorized access to the network between March 2, 2024, and March 5, 2024. Evidence was also found confirming files had been copied from its network. A review was conducted to determine the extent of the breach and on April 10, 2024, it was confirmed that the threat actor had access to the personal information of patients and employees. The breach has recently been reported to the HHS’ Office for Rights as involving the protected health information of up to 380,000 patients. The types of information involved varied from individual to individual. Patient information potentially compromised in the attack includes names, mailing addresses, birth dates, Social...
Rural Hospital Achieves 40% Reduction in No-Shows by Improving Patient Engagement
A rural hospital in Illinois has reduced no-shows by 40% and achieved a 50% reduction in the clinical burden on staff through the use of EHR-integrated patient-facing communication technology. No-shows have a direct impact on patient health, interrupting continuity of care, delaying treatment, and increasing the risk of complications for chronic conditions. No-shows are also a significant drain of resources, with one study finding no-shows cost U.S. healthcare organizations more than $150 billion a year. A recent study by the consulting firm Chartis found half of rural hospitals are operating at a loss and are having to cut services with 418 rural hospitals are at risk of closure. The losses caused by no-shows are adding to the problem. Sparta Community Hospital in Rural Illinois has managed to significantly reduce no-shows by improving patient engagement. The hospital is using proactive, patient-facing communication technology that integrates with its electronic medical record system and delivers appointment reminders and information directly to patients. The one-way communication...



