HC3 Warns of Risk of Web Application Attacks on Healthcare Organizations
The Department of Health and Human Services’ Health Sector Cybersecurity Coordination Center (HC3) has issued guidance to help healthcare organizations protect against web application attacks. Web applications have grown in popularity in healthcare in recent years and are used for patient portals, electronic medical record systems, scheduling appointments, accessing test results, patient monitoring, online pharmacies, dental CAD systems, inventory management, and more. These applications are accessed through a standard web browser, however, in contrast to most websites, the user is required to authenticate to the application. Web application attacks are conducted by financially motivated cybercriminals and state-sponsored Advanced Persistent Threat (APT) actors for a range of different nefarious activities. Attacks exploiting vulnerabilities in web applications have been increasing and web application attacks are now the number one healthcare attack vector, according to the 2022 Verizon Data Breach Investigations Report. Web application attacks most commonly target internet-facing...
Benson Health Notifies 28,913 Patients About May 2021 Data Breach
Benson Health in North Carolina has recently started notifying 28,913 patients that some of their protected health information was potentially accessed or acquired in a cyberattack that was detected on May 5, 2021. Benson Health said an investigation was immediately launched when the breach was detected, and a specialist cybersecurity and data privacy law firm and third-party forensic specialists were engaged to assist with the investigation. The investigation confirmed that a data set had been exposed and was potentially stolen by the attacker. Data mining experts were retained to perform a comprehensive review of the affected information, which confirmed on July 7, 2022, that the dataset included names, birth dates, Social Security numbers, and health and treatment information. Notification letters were sent to affected individuals on July 12, 2021, more than 14 months after the data breach was first detected. Affected individuals have been offered Single Bureau Credit Monitoring/Single Bureau Credit Report/Single Bureau Credit Score services at no charge for 12 months. Business...
NIST Updates Guidance on HIPAA Security Rule Compliance
The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has updated its guidance for HIPAA-regulated entities on implementing the HIPAA Security Rule to help them better protect patients’ personal and protected health information. The Security Rule of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act established national standards for protecting the electronic protected health information (ePHI) that HIPAA-regulated entities create, receive, maintain, or transmit. Ensuring compliance with the HIPAA Security Rule is more important than ever due to the increasing number of cyberattacks on HIPAA-regulated entities. NIST published the first revision of its HIPAA Security Rule guidance in 2008, 6 years before the release of the NIST Cybersecurity Framework. Over the past 14 years, NIST has released other cybersecurity guidance and has regularly updated its Security and Privacy Controls (NIST SP 800-53). One of the main reasons for updating the HIPAA Security Rule guidance was to integrate it into NIST guidance that did not exist when Revision 1 was published in 2008. “One of our...
Department of Justice Announces Seizure of $500,000 in Ransom Payments Made by U.S. Healthcare Providers
The U.S Department of Justice has announced that around $500,000 in Bitcoin has been seized from North Korean threat actors who were using Maui ransomware to attack healthcare organizations in the United States. The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) recently issued a security alert warning that North Korean hackers have been targeting the healthcare and public health sector in the United States using Maui ransomware since at least May 2021. The attacks have caused extensive disruption to IT systems and medical services and have put patient safety at risk. The new ransomware variant was discovered during an investigation of a ransomware attack on a hospital in Kansas in May 2021. The attack was traced to a North Korean hacking group that is suspected of receiving backing from the state. The Kansas hospital had its servers encrypted, preventing access to essential IT systems for more than a week. The hospital paid a ransom of $100,000 for the keys to decrypt files and regain access to its servers and promptly...
The Methodist Hospitals, Inc. Settles Class Action Data Breach Lawsuit for $425,000
The Methodist Hospitals Inc. has agreed to settle a class action lawsuit and has created a fund of $425,000 to cover claims from victims of a 2019 data breach that affected almost 70,000 current and former patients. The Gary, IN-based healthcare provider reported an email security incident to the HHS’ Office for Civil Rights on April 4, 2019, that resulted in the exposure and potential theft of the protected health information of 68,039 patients. The investigation confirmed hackers gained access to two employee email accounts between March 13, 2019, and July 8, 2019, following responses to phishing emails and potentially exfiltrated patient information such as names, addresses, birth dates, Social Security numbers, driver’s license numbers, Medicare/Medicaid numbers, usernames, passwords, treatment and diagnosis information, and payment card information. A lawsuit – Jones v. The Methodist Hospitals, Inc. – was filed in the Harris County District Court in Texas in the wake of the data breach that alleged The Methodist Hospitals was negligent for failing to adequately protect...



