Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center and Baptist Health Report Data Breaches of Over 1.2 Million Records
Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center has confirmed that the protected health information of 1,290,104 patients was compromised in a data breach at its electronic medical record vendor, Eye Care Leaders. Eye Care Leaders said it detected a breach on Dec. 4, 2021, and disabled the affected systems within 24 hours. Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center said it received the final results of the forensic investigation on April 19, 2022. The compromised information included the following data elements: name, address, phone numbers, driver’s license number, email, gender, date of birth, medical record number, health insurance information, appointment information, and Social Security number, as well as medical information related to ophthalmology services. No evidence of data exfiltration was found. Over the past few weeks, the number of eye care providers known to have been affected by the Eye Care Leaders data breach has been growing. At least 23 eye care providers have confirmed they have been affected and the protected health information of more than 2 million patients...
5 Security Breaches Reported in Which PHI was Potentially Compromised
Patient Information Potentially Compromised in Atrium Health Phishing Attack A phishing incident has been reported by Charlotte, NC-based Atrium Health that exposed the protected health information of 6,695 patients who used its home health service, Atrium Health at Home. On April 7, 2022, an employee responded to a phishing email and disclosed credentials for an email and messaging account. The breach was detected on April 8 and the unauthorized access was immediately blocked. Between April 7 and April 8, the unauthorized third party used the account to send other phishing emails, which suggests that obtaining patient information stored in the account was not the aim of the attack, although it was not possible to determine if any patient information was viewed or obtained. A review of the emails, messages and attachments in the account revealed they contained patients’ full names, home addresses, birth dates, health insurance information, and medical information (such as medical record number, dates of service, provider and facility and/or diagnosis and treatment information). A...
University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Settles Data Breach Lawsuit for $450,000
University of Pittsburgh Medical Center has agreed to settle a class action data breach lawsuit and will make $450,000 available to cover claims from individuals who have suffered losses due to the theft and misuse of their protected health information. The data breach affected approximately 36,000 patients and saw their protected health information accessed and stolen by an unauthorized third party between April 2020 and June 2020. The breach occurred at UPMC’s legal counsel, Charles J. Hilton PC, (CJH), which provided billing-related services. The compromised data was stored within the firm’s email environment and included names, birth dates, Social Security numbers, financial information ID numbers, signatures, insurance information, and medical information. The data breach was detected in June 2020; however, notifications were not sent to affected individuals until December 2020. While many speculative lawsuits are filed against healthcare organizations and their business associates over the exposure of patient data, in this case, the plaintiff was defrauded soon after the...
Meta Sued over the Scraping of Patient Data from Hospital Websites
A lawsuit has been filed against Meta that alleges the social media giant has been knowingly collecting patient data from hospital websites via the Meta Pixel tracking tool, and in doing so has violated the privacy of millions of patients. The lawsuit was filed in the U.S. Northern District of California and alleges violations of state and federal laws related to the collection of patient data without consent. Last week, a report was released by The Markup/STAT on a study on the 100 top hospitals in the United States which found that one-third used the Meta Pixel tool on their websites. The Meta Pixel tool is a snippet of JavaScript code that is used to track visitor actions on websites, such as the forms they click and the options they select from dropdown menus. When the tool is included on healthcare providers’ websites, there is potential for the tool to transmit protected health information to Meta/Facebook, such as IP address, when a patient has scheduled an appointment and any information selected from menus, such as the medical condition that the appointment is about. The...
5 HIPAA-Regulated Entities Announce Hacking Incidents that Exposed PHI
PHI of Almost 69,000 Individuals Compromised in Hacking Incident at Comstar Comstar, a Rowley, MA-based provider of ambulance billing, collection, ePCR Hosting, and client/patient services, has discovered that an unauthorized third party gained access to some of its servers, which housed files that contained individuals’ personally identifiable and protected health information. Some of those files were confirmed as having been viewed. The substitute breach notice did not state when the breach occurred, but it was detected on or around March 26, 2022. A review of the affected files confirmed they contained information such as names, dates of birth, medical assessment and medication information, health insurance information, and Social Security numbers. Comstar said it already had strict security measures in place, a review has been conducted of its policies and procedures relating to data security, and measures will be taken to further protect against similar incidents in the future. No evidence of data theft or misuse of individuals’ information was identified; however, as a...



