HITRUST Cybersecurity Framework Gets 2023 Update
The information risk management, standards, and certification body, HITRUST, has announced that it will be releasing a new version of its popular cybersecurity framework this month. Version 11 of the HITRUST CSF includes several improvements to ensure the framework stays relevant, with improved mitigations against evolving and emerging cyber threats, while reducing the burden on healthcare organizations for certification. The HITRUST CSF is a risk management and compliance framework that healthcare organizations can adopt to reduce the burden and complexity of achieving HIPAA compliance and effectively manage and reduce risks to private and confidential information, including protected health information (PHI). To better protect against emerging and evolving cyber threats, the new version of the HITRUST CSF enables the entire HITRUST assessment portfolio to leverage cyber threat-adaptive controls, appropriate for each level of assurance. Control mappings have been improved as has the precision of specifications, which reduces the level of effort required for HITRUST Certification....
Fertility Centers of Illinois Proposes $450,000 Settlement to Resolve Data Breach Lawsuit
Fertility Centers of Illinois has proposed a $450,000 settlement to resolve a lawsuit filed on behalf of patients and employees who were affected by its February 2021 data breach. On February 1, 2021, hackers gained access to the network where sensitive employee and patient information was stored, including names, employee ID numbers, Social Security numbers, passport numbers, financial account and payment information, diagnoses, treatment information, medical record numbers, billings and claims information, occupational health information, Medicare/Medicaid information, and usernames and passwords with PINs or account login information. The investigation of the breach took six months, but it then took a further four months for affected individuals to be notified. Notification letters were finally sent in December 2021 and the data breach was reported to the HHS’ Office for Civil Rights on December 27, 2021, as affecting 79,943 patients. It should be noted that the HIPAA Breach Notification Rule requires the HHS and affected individuals to be notified about breaches of protected...
Scripps Health Proposes $3.5M Settlement to Resolve Class Action Ransomware Lawsuit
A settlement has been proposed by Scripps Health to resolve a consolidated class action lawsuit – In Re: Scripps Health Data Incident Litigation – to resolve all claims related to its 2021 ransomware attack. In April 2021, Scripps Health suffered a ransomware attack that was reported to the Department of Health and Human Services as affecting 147,267 patients. The attack caused major disruption at Scripps Health hospitals. Scripps Health had to redirect ambulances and cancel scheduled appointments, and the staff was forced to record patient information on paper while the San Diego-based health system restored its IT systems – a process that lasted around a month. The investigation revealed the hackers stole files from its network on April 29, 2021, which contained HIPAA protected health information such as names, Social Security numbers, driver’s license numbers, and healthcare information, including information stored in medical records. The ransomware attack has proven to be incredibly costly for Scripps Health. Its financial statements show the attack cost at least $113 million...
Judge Denies Injunction Banning Meta from Collecting Patient Data via Meta Pixel Code
Plaintiffs in a consolidated class action lawsuit against Meta recently sought an injunction to stop the company from collecting and transmitting data collected from the websites of healthcare providers through Meta Pixel tracking code. The plaintiffs claim the use of Meta Pixel code on appointment scheduling pages and patient portals allows sensitive information, including patient communications, to be collected and monetized by Meta, which violates federal and state privacy laws. William Orrick, U.S. District Judge for the Northern District of California, has recently issued a ruling denying the injunction. Background In the summer, an investigation was conducted by The Markup into the use of tracking technologies such as Meta Pixel on the websites of healthcare providers and found that 33% of the top 100 hospitals in the United States had the code on their websites, some of which had added the code to their patient portals. Meta Pixel can collect any data in HTTP headers, button click data, and form field names. That code was found to be transmitting patient information to Meta...
Lawsuit Seeking Property Insurance Cover for Ransomware Attack Fails
Cyber insurance policies can help to cover the cost of losses from ransomware attacks, but these policies are becoming more difficult to obtain. Insurers are tightening their requirements for obtaining policies and many insurers are placing limits on underwriting amounts. Premiums are also skyrocketing, putting policies out of the reach of many healthcare organizations, if insurance can even be obtained. There has been further bad news this week for healthcare organizations that have been unable to obtain cyber insurance, as the Ohio Supreme Court has recently ruled that ransomware attacks do not constitute physical damage, which means claims cannot be made against property insurance policies. The decision ends a 3-year court battle between the medical billing software developer, EMOI, and its insurer, Owners Insurance Company. EMOI suffered a ransomware attack in September 2019 and paid the ransom demand of $35,000 to regain access to its files. EMOI also invested in upgrades to its security infrastructure to prevent further attacks. The ransomware gang provided the keys to...



