LockBit Affiliate Sentenced to 4 Years in Jail and Ordered to Pay $860,000 in Restitution
An affiliate of the notorious LockBit ransomware group has been sentenced in Canada to almost four years in jail and has been ordered to pay more than $860,000 in restitution. Mikhail Vasiliev, 34, is a Russian-Canadian national who was born in Moscow and moved to Canada more than 20 years ago. During the COVID-19 pandemic, Vasiliev became an affiliate of the LockBit ransomware operation, one of the most prolific ransomware-as-a-service groups over the past few years. Around 18 months ago, Vasiliev was arrested following a raid of his home in Bradford, Ontario. The search of his property uncovered a list of prospective and historical victims, instructions on how to deploy LockBit ransomware, the source code of the ransomware, the control panel used to deliver the ransomware, and screenshots of conversations with a core member of the LockBit Group – LockBitSupp – on the Tox messaging platform. Vasiliev admitted to being an affiliate of the LockBit group between 2021 and 2022 and having conducted attacks on businesses in Saskatchewan, Montreal, and Newfoundland, from whom...
HHS-OIG: Pennsylvania Improperly Claimed $551 Million in Medicaid Funds
Audits conducted by the Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General (HHS-OIG) of states that claim Medicaid school-based costs with the assistance of contractors have revealed some states have claimed unallowable federal funds due to their contractors improperly conducting random moment time studies (RMTSs). Pennsylvania is the latest state to be audited by HHS-OIG, which found that approximately $590 million was claimed in federal Medicaid payments for school-based services between July 1, 2015, and June 30, 2019, $551.4 million of which was improperly claimed. For the audit, HHS-OIG reviewed a stratified random sample of 310 random moments, each of which was coded as a health service or administrative activity. HHS-OIG also looked at the methods Pennsylvania used to allocate health services costs to Medicaid. Based on the sample, HHS-OIG estimated that Pennsylvania claimed $182.5 million in unallowable Federal funds because it did not support that all moments used in RMTSs and coded as Medicaid-eligible were actually for Medicaid-eligible health services...
What is an HHS OIG Compliance Program?
An HHS OIG compliance program consists of best practices that should be included in an integrated healthcare compliance program to avoid violating fraud and abuse laws enforced by the Department of Health and Human Service (HHS) Office of Inspector General (OIG). Adding HHS OIG compliance best practices to an integrated program not only helps avoid penalties for HHS OIG compliance failures, but may also improve compliance with the integrated program. The best way to run your HHS OIC compliance program is with specially designed software designed for compliance officers. Integrated healthcare compliance programs are programs that combine some or all applicable healthcare rules, regulations, and standards into a single compliance program. For example, a healthcare facility might combine CMS’ Emergency Preparedness Rule (81 FR 63860) with OSHA’s Emergency Planning Regulation (§1910.38) and HIPAA’s Contingency Plan Standard (§164.308(a)(7)) to comply with all three requirements via a single activity. Although integrated healthcare compliance programs can be complicated to develop and...
Humana Reports Mailing Errors Affecting More than 10,000 Members
Three mailing error incidents have resulted in the impermissible disclosure of the PHI of more than 10,000 Humana members. Data breaches have also recently occurred at KMJ Health Solutions, Jewish Home Lifecare, and Lake of the Woods County Social Services. Insurance ACE/Humana Inc. The Kentucky-based health insurance provider Humana Inc. has recently disclosed three separate mailing error incidents that have resulted in the impermissible disclosure of the protected health information of 10,688 of its members. On December 8, 2023, a programming error resulted in Explanation of Payment documents intended for providers being sent to an incorrect address. The documents included first and last names, Humana ID numbers, provider names, dates of service, and claim payment information. On December 14, 2023, large print/braille health plan communications were mailed to incorrect recipients. An error was made when fixing an unrelated coding issue that added a date/time stamp to the naming convention, which was not a unique identifier. As a result, the system began overwriting files as...
HHS-OIG Agrees $49,000 Settlement with North Carolina Hospital to Resolve Alleged EMTALA Violation
The Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General (HHS-OIG) has agreed to a settlement with UNC Health Chatham Hospital that resolves an alleged violation of the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA). EMTALA was enacted in 1986 to ensure public access to emergency services regardless of an individual’s ability to pay, and EMTALA applies to all hospitals that offer emergency services through a dedicated department. There are also specific obligations for hospitals that participate in Medicare and offer emergency services, including the requirement to provide a medical screening examination (MSE) when a request is made for examination or treatment for an emergency medical condition. Organizations found to have violated EMTALA can face stiff financial penalties and, potentially, exclusion from federally funded healthcare programs. On January 16, 2022, a 62-year-old patient presented to Chatham’s Emergency Department (ED) via emergency medical services (EMS). Before arriving at the hospital, EMS called in a report about the patient’s condition to the...



