OSHA Adopts More Aggressive Stance on OSH Act Noncompliance
In late January, the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) at the U.S. Department of Labor published new enforcement guidance which will see the agency adopt a much more aggressive stance on serious violations of the Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSH Act) in an effort to improve OSH Act compliance. OSHA will be stepping up its enforcement activities and will be issuing more civil monetary penalties to employers that fail to ensure a safe working environment for their employees. According to OSHA, the change was made to make its penalties more effective at “stopping employers from repeatedly exposing workers to life-threatening hazards or failing to comply with certain workplace safety and health requirements.” The guidance for its Regional and Area Offices covers instance-by-instance (IBI) citations for high-gravity serious violations of OSHA standards related to falls, trenching, machine guarding, respiratory protection, permit-required confined spaces, and lockout tagout, as well as other-than-serious violations of OSHA standards related to...
Organizations Increasingly Opaque About Cause of Data Breaches
When a data breach occurs and sensitive information is disclosed, the HIPAA Breach Notification Rule requires affected individuals to be notified. The FTC Health Breach Notification Rule also has breach reporting requirements, and all 50 states have enacted data breach notification laws. What is lacking in many of these regulations – at both the federal and state level – is what these notification letters must include. Just a few years ago, the majority of breach notification letters contained reasonably detailed information about the breach, but it is now much more common for victims of data breaches to be provided with the bare minimum information to comply with federal and state regulations, which makes it difficult for the individuals affected to accurately gauge the level of risk they face. While it was common for ransomware attacks to be reported as such, these are increasingly reported as hacking incidents with no mention of file encryption or data theft. Even when attacks involved the theft of sensitive data and the publication of that information on data leak sites,...
Benefits of HIPAA for Healthcare Organizations
The benefits of HIPAA for healthcare organizations include the standardization of healthcare transactions to increase efficiency and reduce fraud, and the increased transparency of how PHI is used and disclosed – which not only reduces medical errors but which can also increase patient trust in their healthcare providers. One of the problems with developing legislation for the entire healthcare industry is rules must be written for organizations of different sizes, with vastly different business models, budgets, staffing levels, and capabilities. Rules need to be written that are sufficiently flexible to accommodate this variety and be appropriate for all organizations and their unique operating structures. One of the challenges with developing HIPAA was to create rules that would correct inefficiencies and get the healthcare system working more harmoniously. They also needed to stand the test of time and be flexible enough to accommodate changes that could not be envisaged when the legislation was signed into law. When the Privacy and Security requirements were introduced, they...
Ransomware Attacks, Hacks, and Pixel-Related Data Breaches Reported
UCLA Health Announces Pixel-Related Data Breach UCLA Health has recently started notifying approximately 94,000 patients about an impermissible disclosure of their protected health information to certain unnamed service providers due to the use of analytics tools on its website and mobile app. UCLA Health said analytics tools were used to better understand how patients interacted with the website and app. The data collected by UCLA Health was aggregated and used to develop more efficient and effective communication to improve its services to patients. UCLA Health said it was made aware of the potential for these analytics tools to transmit sensitive patient information to service providers in June 2022, and immediately disabled these tools on the website and app. A third-party forensics firm was then engaged to review the data collected and potentially transmitted by these tools to establish the extent of any privacy violation. The privacy violation occurred due to the use of these tools on the appointment scheduling forms on the website and app, which may have captured and...
San Andreas Regional Center Agrees to Settle 2021 Ransomware Attack Lawsuit
San Andreas Regional Center has agreed to settle a class action lawsuit that was filed in response to a July 2021 ransomware attack in which hackers gained access to the personal information of more than 57,000 patients The San Jose, CA-based healthcare provider supports individuals with developmental disabilities through its facilities in the Santa Clara, Santa Cruz, San Benito, and Monterey counties. The ransomware attack occurred on or around July 5, 2021, and prior to encrypting files, the threat actor potentially accessed and exfiltrated sensitive patient data such as names, addresses, dates of birth, telephone numbers, Social Security numbers, email addresses, health plan beneficiary numbers, health insurance information, full-face photos, and medical information. Affected individuals were notified about the cyberattack in August 2021 and were offered complimentary credit monitoring and identity theft protection services. A lawsuit – Lopez, et al. v. San Andreas Regional Center – was filed in the Superior Court of California in response to the breach alleging the...



