Time to Stop Blocking a National Patient Identifier System
In 1996, the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) was signed into law and one of its requirements was for the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to develop a national patient identifier system. Under such a system, every person in the United States would be provided with a unique permanent ID number that would allow them to be tracked across the entire U.S. health system, not for any form of control, government interference in healthcare, or any other nefarious purpose, but to address a pressing public health and safety issue: To ensure patients can be reliably and accurately connected with their health information. 27 years later and we are no closer to a national patient identifier than we were in 1996. The reason for the lack of action goes back to 1998, when Representative Ron Paul (R-TX) introduced a ban on the HHS developing a national patient identifier system by ensuring no funding was provided by Congress for that purpose. Language has been included in every appropriation bill since then that prevents any funding from being given to the...
HC3 Issues HPH Sector Alert Following Suspected Clop Cyberattacks
In Early February, a zero-day vulnerability in Fortra’s GoAnywhere MFT secure file transfer software (CVE-2023-0669) was exploited in attacks on more than 130 organizations, including several in the healthcare industry such as Community Health Systems (CHS) in Tennessee. That attack affected up to 1 million patients. Fortra issued an alert about the vulnerability in early February when it was discovered to have been exploited in attacks and issued workarounds to prevent exploitation ahead of an emergency patch being released, which was made available on February 7. The attacks have prompted the Health Sector Cybersecurity Coordination Center (HC3) to issue a further warning about the Clop ransomware group, which claimed responsibility for the attacks. According to Clop, the attacks occurred over a period of around 10 days. The group claims to have exploited the vulnerability – a pre-authentication remote code execution vulnerability in the License Response Servlet – allowing the theft of sensitive data. Clop typically uses ransomware to encrypt files after exfiltrating sensitive...
January 2023 Healthcare Data Breach Report
January is usually one of the quietest months of the year for healthcare data breaches and last month was no exception. In January, 40 data breaches of 500 or more records were reported to the HHS’ Office for Civil Rights, the same number as in December 2022. January’s total is well below the 53 data breaches reported in January 2022 and the 12-month average of 58 data breaches a month. For the second successive month, the number of breached records has fallen, with January seeing just 1,064,195 healthcare records exposed or impermissibly disclosed – The lowest monthly total since June 2020, and well below the 12-month average of 4,209,121 breached records a month. Largest Healthcare Data Breaches in January 2023 In January there were 13 data breaches involving 10,000 or more records, 8 of which involved hacked network servers and email accounts. The largest HIPAA compliance data breach of the month affected Mindpath Health, where multiple employee email accounts were compromised. 5 unauthorized access/disclosure incidents were reported that impacted more than 10,000...
CentraState Medical Center Facing Class Action Lawsuit Over December 2022 Ransomware Attack
A lawsuit has been filed against Freehold Township, NJ-based CentraState Healthcare System over its December 2022 ransomware attack, a few days after the health system started sending notification letters to around 617,000 affected patients. The lawsuit alleges CentraState Medical Center was negligent for failing to implement adequate and reasonable safeguards to protect the sensitive data of its patients. On February 10, 2023, CentraState confirmed it had suffered a ransomware attack that disrupted its computer systems. The health system detected the attack on December 29, 2022, blocked the unauthorized access, and launched an investigation to determine the nature and scope of the breach. CentraState confirmed that the hackers gained access to part of its systems that contained an archived database, and stole that database. The database included names, addresses, dates of birth, Social Security numbers, health insurance information, medical record numbers, and patient account numbers. Complimentary credit monitoring and identity theft protection services were offered to...
Biden Administration Considers HIPAA Update to Better Protect Reproductive Health Information
The Biden Administration is considering new rulemaking to update HIPAA to better protect reproductive health information, following the Supreme Court Decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, which removed the federal right to abortion and left it to individual states to decide on the legality of abortions for state residents. Currently, at least 24 U.S. states have implemented bans on abortions or are likely to do so, with 12 states already having a near-total ban. The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act classes reproductive health information as protected health information (PHI), so uses and disclosures are restricted by the HIPAA Privacy Rule. Following the Supreme Court decision, the HHS issued guidance to HIPAA-regulated entities on how the HIPAA Privacy Rule applies to reproductive healthcare data, confirming uses and disclosures of reproductive health information are restricted, and that the information can only be used or disclosed without a valid patient authorization for purposes related to treatment, payment, or healthcare operations. The...



