LifeBridge Health Agrees to $9.5 Million Settlement to Resolve 2016 Data Breach Claims
LifeBridge Health Inc. has agreed to settle a class action lawsuit to resolve claims from patients affected by a data breach that was discovered in 2018. The total value of the settlement is $9.475 million, which includes an $800,000 fund to cover claims from class members. In March 2018, LifeBridge Health discovered a malware infection that provided unauthorized individuals with access to a server that hosted its electronic medical records, patient registration, and billing systems. The breach investigation determined the initial intrusion occurred 18 months previously in September 2016. The breach was disclosed by LifeBridge Health in May 2018, with the healthcare provider confirming the information of 582,174 patients had potentially been compromised, with the exposed information including names, dates of birth, addresses, diagnoses, medications prescribed, clinical and treatment information, insurance details, and a limited number of Social Security numbers. A lawsuit – Johnson, et al. v. LifeBridge Health, Inc. – was filed in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City,...
CommonSpirit Health Experiencing Widespread Outage Due to Cyberattack
CommonSpirit Health is experiencing a data security incident that has affected many of its healthcare facilities. According to a statement issued by the health system on October 4, 2022, IT systems have been taken offline as a precautionary step while the incident is investigated, and the exact nature and scope of the incident is determined. A brief update was issued on Wednesday, October 5, 2022, confirming the IT security incident was still impacting some of its facilities and that staff members were operating under its tried and tested emergency protocols and are using pen and paper to record patient information while IT systems are offline. The incident was detected on October 3, 2022, but little information has been released at this stage about the exact nature of the incident. CommonSpirit Health said it is doing everything possible to minimize the impact on its patients. Without access to certain IT systems, the decision has been taken to reschedule some appointments while the security incident is mitigated. Some patients have reported that it has not been possible to make...
Advisory Issued About BD Totalys MultiProcessor Vulnerability
The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) has issued a medical advisory about a recently discovered vulnerability that affects the BD Totalys MultiProcessor, which is used by hospitals and labs for processing clinical tissue specimens. The vulnerability is due to the use of hard-coded credentials, which could allow an attacker with access to a vulnerable Totalys MultiProcessor to access, modify, or delete sensitive data, including personally identifiable and protected health information. The vulnerability cannot be exploited remotely. In order to exploit the flaw, a malicious actor would need physical access to the BD Totalys MultiProcessor or network access to the system. Any additional security controls would also need to be bypassed. The vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2022-40263, affects all BD Totalys MultiProcessor versions including and prior to v1.70, and has been assigned a CVSS severity score of 6.6 out of 10 (medium severity). The vulnerability was discovered by BD and was reported to CISA under its responsible disclosure policy. BD says the vulnerability...
NIST Urged to Make HIPAA Security Rule Implementation Guidance More Usable for Small Providers
The Health Sector Coordinating Council (HSCC) has urged the National Institute for Standards & Technology to provide tailored guidance for smaller and lesser-resourced healthcare organizations on implementing the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) Security Rule, and makes several other recommendations to improve the utility of its new HIPAA Security Rule implementation guidance. Background Recently, NIST issued a draft update (SP 800-66r2) to its 2008 publication: An Introductory Resource Guide for Implementing the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) Security Rule, and sought feedback from industry stakeholders ahead of the publication of the final version of the guidance. SP 800-66r2 provides guidance for HIPAA-regulated entities on assessing and managing risks to ePHI, suggests activities that should be considered as part of an information security program, and provides several useful resources that HIPAA-regulated entities can use to help them implement the requirements of the HIPAA Security Rule. HSCC is a private sector-led...
California Governor Signs Package of Bills to Improve Protections for Individuals Seeking Abortion Care
California has taken further steps to improve protections for individuals seeking abortion care and birth control. A package of bills has recently been signed into law by state governor Gavin Newsom, including new data privacy legislation that prohibits healthcare providers from releasing individuals’ medical information in response to subpoenas and requests from out-of-state. The bill (AB 2091) was introduced by Assemblymember Mia Bonta (D-Oakland) in response to the Supreme Court Decisions in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization which removed the federal right to an abortion and put abortion rights in the hands of individual states. Following the decision, several states implemented bans or restrictions on abortions and there are mounting fears that criminal investigations will be launched into women who seek abortions in other states. HIPAA permits healthcare providers to provide PHI to law enforcement to support criminal investigations in limited circumstances. The HHS recently issued guidance to health care providers that stressed that HIPAA does not require regulated...



