Feds Issue Updated Mitigations for Blocking Rhysida Ransomware Attacks
A joint cybersecurity advisory has been issued by the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), and the Multi-State Information Sharing and Analysis Center (MS-ISAC) about Rhysida ransomware. Rhysida ransomware is a ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) operation that first emerged in May 2023. The group engages in double extortion tactics, involving data theft and encryption, with ransom payment required to obtain the keys to decrypt files and prevent the public release of stolen data. Researchers at Check Point identified significant similarities between Rhysida ransomware and Vice Society, one of the most prolific ransomware groups since 2021 that aggressively targeted the education and healthcare sectors. In August 2023, the HHS’ Health Sector Cybersecurity Coordination Center (HC3) issued its own advisory about Rhysida ransomware following several attacks on the healthcare sector, including the attack on Prospect Medical Holdings, which affected 17 hospitals and 166 clinics across the United States. The latest cybersecurity...
OSHA Publishes 7 Year Lookback Report
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has published a 7-Year Lookback Report that summarizes employer-reported inpatient hospitalizations, amputations, and eye losses from 2015 to 2021. Since 2015, employers have been required to submit a Severe Injury Report to OSHA within twenty-four hours if an employee is admitted to hospital, has a body part amputated, or loses an eye due to a workplace accident. Since the reporting requirement began, federal OSHA has received 70,206 Severe Injury Reports. The agency has now compiled the reports into a 7-Year Lookback Report which analyzes the injuries by industry, geography, and injury type. COVID-19 Impacts Data Analysis Hospitalizations attributable to workplace-acquired COVID-19 are mostly excluded from the 7-Year Lookback Report because employers are only required to report hospitalizations that occur within twenty-four hours of the work-related incident responsible for the hospitalization, and the mean incubation period for COVID-19 is three to six days. Nonetheless, the virus had an impact on the number of Severe...
Is Venmo HIPAA compliant?
Venmo is HIPAA compliant by default for receiving patient-originated payments due to an exemption for payment processors in the HIPAA Act, however, it should not be used for any other purposes due to privacy and security concerns. There are also other reasons why covered entities might want to avoid offering this payment option. There is a common misconception among some sources that Venmo should not be used by covered entities to accept payments from patients because Venmo will not sign a Business Associate Agreement. However, there is nothing in HIPAA that prevents covered entities using any service to receive patient-originate payments and – under section 1179 of the Act – financial institutions are exempt from complying with the Privacy Rule when facilitating a financial transaction. Due to the misconception about payment processors, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) clarified the position in the preamble to the 2013 Final Omnibus Rule. HHS stated: “The HIPAA Rules, including the business associate provisions, do not apply to banking and financial institutions...
What are OSHA Whistleblower Rewards?
OSHA whistleblower rewards are payments made to whistleblowers under certain statutes for information that leads to the prosecution of a company in violation of the statute. In no circumstances is OSHA responsible for the payment of a reward, and OSHA’s involvement in such cases is usually limited to addressing retaliation against the whistleblower. The term OSHA whistleblower rewards is a misnomer inasmuch as it implies the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) pays whistleblowers for reporting violations of the Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSH Act). This is not the case. The only benefit to employees of reporting an OSH Act violation is to have a safer and healthier environment to work in. In the event an employer retaliates against an employee for an activity protected by §1977 of the OSH Act, the employee can make a whistleblower complaint to OSHA. The employee has to file the whistleblower complaint within 30 days of the retaliatory event if the complaint is being filed with federal OSHA. The time limit for whistleblower complaints under State OSHA Plans...
Sutter Health Confirms 84K Individuals Affected by Cyberattack on Business Associate
Sutter Health, a healthcare provider serving Northern California, has recently confirmed that patient data was compromised in a hacking incident at one of its business associates, Virgin Pulse. Virgin Pulse was contracted to provide important notices and communications to patients and was provided with patient data to fulfill that role. Virgin Pulse used Progress Software’s MOVEit Transfer file transfer tool, which had a vulnerability that was exploited by the Clop Group. Progress Software released a patch to fix the vulnerability on May 31, and Virgin Pulse said it moved quickly to apply the patch and recommended mitigation steps; however, the vulnerability had already been exploited. The vulnerability was exploited in attacks on more than 2,300 organizations and the data of more than 60 million individuals was stolen, including the data of 845,441 Sutter Health patients. Sutter Health was informed by Virgin Pulse on September 22, 2023, that it had been affected by the hack, almost 4 months after the cyberattack occurred, but did not get the final report until October 24, 2023....



