Class Action Lawsuit Filed Against Shields Health Care Group Over 2 Million-Record Data Breach
A class action lawsuit has been filed against Shields Health Care Group over its recently announced 2 million-record data breach – the largest healthcare data breach to be reported so far this year by a single HIPAA-regulated entity. Shields Health Care Group is the largest provider of MRI imaging services in New England and operates more than 40 facilities in the region. On May 27, 2022, the Massachusetts-based medical imaging service provider reported the data breach to the HHS’ Office for Civil Rights and confirmed that an unauthorized actor had access to some of its IT systems from March 7 to March 21, 2022. During that time, files were exfiltrated from its systems that included protected patient information (PHI) such as names, addresses, birth dates, Social Security numbers, diagnoses, billing information, insurance numbers and medical or treatment information. A HIPAA data breach of this scale is likely to see several lawsuits filed, with Keller Postman LLC and co-counsel Sweeney Merrigan Law LLP, and Finkelstein, Blankinship, Frei-Pearson, & Garber LLC the first to...
Kaiser Permanente Reports Email System Breach and Exposure of 70,000 Individuals’ PHI
Kaiser Permanente, one of the largest nonprofit health plan and healthcare providers in the United States, has reported a breach of its email system. Kaiser Permanente provides healthcare services to more than 12.5 million patients in 8 states and D.C. but said this breach only affected around 70,000 members of the Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of Washington. Kaiser Permanente said it was alerted to a security incident involving its email system on April 5, 2022. The email account of an employee was confirmed as being accessed by an unauthorized party, and immediate action was taken to secure the account to prevent further unauthorized access. Kaiser Permanente said the account shut down and was secured within hours. An investigation was launched to determine the nature and scope of the security breach and it was confirmed that the incident was limited to a single account; however, that account contained emails and attachments that included the protected health information of certain health plan members. The types of information exposed in the breach included patients’ first and...
OCR Issues Guidance on Audio-Only Telehealth for When the COVID Public Health Emergency Ends
Start preparing now and get your telehealth services HIPAA compliant as when the COVID-19 Public Health Emergency (PHE) ends, the telehealth HIPAA flexibilities stop. That is the advice of the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights, which released new guidance this week on HIPAA and audio-only telehealth services. The Period of Enforcement Discretion Will End In March 2020, the HHS’ Office for Civil Rights issued a Telehealth Notification and said it would be exercising enforcement discretion and would not be imposing sanctions and penalties for HIPAA violations with respect to the good faith provision of telehealth services. The move was intended to make it easier for healthcare organizations to offer telehealth services to patients to help prevent the spread of COVID-19. OCR permitted healthcare organizations to use remote communication tools for telehealth, which included apps and platforms that would not normally be considered ‘HIPAA-compliant,’ and did not require HIPAA-covered entities to enter into a business associate agreement with the...
OCR to Produce Video Presentation on HITECH Act Recognized Security Practices
The HHS’ Office for Civil Rights (OCR) is producing a video presentation to help HIPAA-regulated entities implement “Recognized Security Practices.” The Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act was recently amended (Public Law 116-321) to require OCR to consider recognized security practices that have been in place for at least 12 months prior to certain Security Rule enforcement and audit activities. OCR previously issued a Request for Information regarding the HITECH Act recognized security practices, the comment period for which ended last week. There has been confusion about what constitutes recognized security practices and how it is possible to demonstrate to OCR that recognized security practices have been adopted and have been continuous for the 12 months prior to a data breach or OCR investigation. In the video presentation, Nicholas Heesters, Senior Advisor for Cybersecurity at OCR will explain the 2021 HITECH Act amendment regarding recognized security practices, provide guidance on demonstrating security practices have been in place,...
700,000 Patients Affected by Yuma Regional Medical Center Ransomware Attack
Yuma Regional Medical Center (YRMC) in Arizona has announced it was the victim of a ransomware attack in April in which the attackers obtained the HIPAA protected health information (PHI) of 737,448 current and former patients. According to the recent YRMC announcement, the attack was detected on April 25, 2022, which affected some of its IT systems. YRMC said immediate action was taken to contain the attack, and systems were taken offline to prevent further unauthorized access. Law enforcement was notified, and a third-party computer forensics firm was engaged to assist with the investigation and determine the nature and scope of the attack. The investigation confirmed that the attackers gained access to its systems between April 21 and April 25, 2022, and, prior to file encryption, a subset of files were exfiltrated from its systems. YRMC said it is working with security experts to bring its systems back online as quickly as possible. Throughout the attack, its facilities remained open and operated using established backup processes and downtime procedures, which did result in...



