Egyptian Health Department Cyberattack Affects Up to 100,000 Individuals
Egyptian Health Department (EHD) in Eldorado, IL, has recently announced a data breach affecting up to 100,000 patients. EHD suffered a cyberattack on December 21, 2023, and while the forensic investigation is still ongoing, evidence has been found that indicates folders on its network were accessed by an unauthorized individual. Those folders contained files that included patients’ protected health information and employee data. The exposed patient data included names, dates of birth, medical information, and health insurance claims information. The exposed employee data included names, Social Security numbers, driver’s license numbers/ other government-issued IDs, financial account information, and/or insurance information. EHD is still investigating the incident to determine the potentially impacted employees and patients and will mail notifications when that process is completed. EHD has taken several steps to improve security, including creating new domain controllers, moving the SMB network shares of the domain controllers to a dedicated virtual machine, conducting permission...
Feds Sound Alarm as ALPHV/Blackcat Ransomware Group Targets Healthcare
A joint cybersecurity alert has been issued by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), and the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to share known Indicators of Compromise (IoCs) and the latest Tactic, Techniques, and Procedures (TTPs) used by the ALPHV/Blackcat ransomware group. In December 2023, the U.S. Department of Justice (DoJ) announced that it had disrupted the operations of the ALPHV/Blackcat. An FBI agent posed as an affiliate and gained access to the group’s computer network, resulting in the seizure of several of the websites operated by the group. Around 900 public/private key pairs were obtained which allowed a decryption tool to be developed to help those victims recover their files. Within hours of the DOJ announcement, a spokesperson for the group said it had unseized the websites and issued a threat of retaliation. The group said the restrictions that were in place for affiliates had been removed. “You can now block hospitals, nuclear power plants, anything, anywhere,” wrote...
HIPAA Compliance for Medical Software Applications
HIPAA compliance for medical software applications can be a complicated issue to understand. Some eHealth and mHealth apps are subject to HIPAA and medical software regulations issued by the FDA. Others are not. This article has been prepared with relevance to HIPAA and medical software. For information about FDA regulations, please visit the FDA´s “Device Advice” web page. Are the Apps Subject to HIPAA Compliance for Medical Software Applications? This will depend on the nature of the app´s function and what its purpose is. If you build an eHealth or mHealth app that collects personal data about the person using it for the exclusive use of the person using it, the app is not subject to HIPAA compliance for medical software applications. If, however, the personal data collected will be shared with a medical professional or other HIPAA Covered Entity (a healthcare insurance company for example), then the data is considered to be Protected Health Information and the app needs to be HIPAA compliant. FREE BUYER'S GUIDEHow To Choose Compliance Software Get our comprehensive buyer's...
How Much are HHS OIG Penalties?
HHS OIG penalties vary depending on the nature of the offense, the scale of the offense, and the cooperation of the violating party during the investigation of the offense. Other factors that can influence HHS OIG penalties include the regulatory limits applied to each type of violation and the violating party’s previous history of compliance with healthcare regulations. Among its many roles, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Office of Inspector General (OIG) is responsible for investigating allegations of fraud, waste, and abuse in Federal healthcare programs. When HHS OIG identifies fraud, waste, or abuse, it has the authority to recover funds, exclude individuals and organizations from Federal healthcare programs, and pursue civil monetary penalties or criminal penalties depending on the nature of the offense. The amount of HHS OIG penalties is calculated on a case-by-case basis, and quite often cases can be settled for a mutually agreed amount to avoid potential litigation. The amount of HHS OIG penalties can also be reduced if the violating individual or...
Higher NIST CSF and HCIP Coverage Linked with Lower Cyber Insurance Premium Growth
Adoption of the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Cybersecurity Framework (CSF) improves resilience to cyberattacks and the reduced risk is reflected in cyber insurance premiums. A recent Healthcare Cybersecurity Benchmarking Study has confirmed that healthcare organizations that have adopted the NIST CSF had lower annual increases in their cyber insurance premiums than healthcare organizations that have not adopted the NIST CSF. The study was the result of a collaboration between Censinet, KLAS Research, the American Hospital Association, Health-ISAC, and the Healthcare and Public Health Sector Coordinating Council and was conducted on 54 payer and provider organizations and 4 healthcare vendors in Q4, 2023. Adoption of the NIST CSF indicates a higher level of preparedness and resiliency and therefore lower risk for insurers. Healthcare organizations that use the NIST CSF as their primary cybersecurity framework report premium increases of one-third (6%) of the percentage reported by organizations that have not adopted the NIST CSF (18%). The report assesses...



