10 Charged Over BEC Scams Targeting Medicare, Medicaid, and Private Insurance Programs
The U.S. Department of Justice has charged 10 individuals over business email compromise scams that have resulted in more than $11.1 million being defrauded from Medicaid, Medicare, and private health insurance programs. The payments were intended for hospitals for providing covered medical services. Business email compromise (BEC) scams involve gaining access to legitimate email accounts and using them to trick individuals responsible for wire transfers into making fraudulent payments to attacker-controlled accounts and these scams are the biggest cause of losses to cybercrime. According to the FBI, more than $43 billion was lost to these scams between June 2016 and December 2021, and in 2021 alone, the FBI Internet Crime Complaint Center received reports of losses of $2,395,953,296 to BEC scams. The arrests were related to a series of scams that spoofed hospital email accounts. The individuals allegedly involved in these attacks sent emails requesting changes be made to the bank account details on file for all future payments. The accounts had been recently set up by money mules,...
Are Email Addresses Protected by HIPAA?
Email addresses are protected by HIPAA when they are maintained by or on behalf of a HIPAA covered entity in designated record sets containing individually identifiable health information and the email addresses could identify – or be used to identify – the subject of the individually identifiable health information. However, there are many scenarios in which email addresses are not protected by HIPAA. To understand when are email addresses protected by HIPAA, it is important to understand what is considered Protected Health Information (PHI) under HIPAA. This is because HIPAA only protects by default individually identifiable health information relating to an individual’s health condition, treatment for the health condition, and payment for the treatment. Information of this nature is maintained in one or more designated record sets by a HIPAA covered entity. Any other information that could identity – or be used to identify – the subject of the health, treatment, or payment information assumes the same protected status as individually identifiable health information when it...
Forefront Dermatology Proposes $3.75 Million Settlement to Resolve Ransomware Lawsuit
The Wisconsin-based dermatology practice, Forefront Dermatology, has agreed to settle a class action lawsuit filed on behalf of patients whose protected health information (PHI) was compromised in a ransomware attack in late May 2021. Forefront Dermatology has affiliated practices in 21 states and Washington D.C. In May 2021, the practice was targeted by the Cuba ransomware gang, which gained access to its network and exfiltrated files from the network before encrypting data. The gang then dumped some of the stolen data on its dark web data leak site to pressure the practice into paying the ransom. According to Forefront Dermatology’s data breach notice, the attack was detected on June 4. The forensic investigation confirmed the attackers potentially accessed and stole files containing the PHI of up to 2.4 million employees and patients. That information included names, dates of birth, account numbers, health insurance information, Social Security numbers, medical record numbers, medical and treatment information, and other sensitive data. A class action lawsuit was filed in the...
Feds Issue Warning to HPH Sector About Aggressive Hive Ransomware Group
The Hive ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) operation first emerged in June 2021 and has aggressively targeted the health and public health sector (HPH) and continues to do so. From June 2021 until November 2022, the group conducted attacks on more than 1,300 organizations worldwide, generating more than $100 million in ransom payments. Victims in the HPH sector include the public health system in Costa Rica, Partnership HealthPlan of California, Memorial Health System, Missouri Delta Medical Center, Southwell, Hendry Regional Medical Center, and Lake Charles Memorial Health System, with the latter currently recovering from the attack that occurred this month. The attacks put patient safety at risk and have forced hospitals to divert ambulances, cancel surgeries, postpone appointments, and close urgent care units. On November 17, 2022, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), and the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) issued a joint alert to the HPH sector warning about the risk of attacks and shared Indicators...
How Michigan HIPAA Laws Might be Changing
Michigan HIPAA laws are the regulations that Michigan-based HIPAA Covered Entities and Business Associates have to comply with when the state´s laws provide more stringent privacy protections or greater individuals´ rights than HIPAA. In recent years, Michigan´s state laws have been closely aligned with HIPAA, but that may be about to change. If your organization is a HIPAA Covered Entity or Business Associate operating in Michigan – or one that creates, receives, maintains, or transmits PHI of Michigan residents – the privacy, security, and breach notification regulations you have to comply with are mostly the same as appear in the HIPAA Administrative Simplification Regulations (45 CFR Part 160 and 45 CFR Part 164). Generally, there are relatively few times that Michigan HIPAA laws preempt HIPAA, and these mostly relate to protecting HIV and SUD-related health information and certain types of mental health records, and the mandatory reporting of injuries and illnesses attributable to child abuse, domestic abuse, and elder abuse. There are also a few nuances in the Medical...



