Operational Continuity-Cyber Incident Checklist Published by HSCC
The Health Sector Coordinating Council’s (HSCC) Cybersecurity Working Group (CWG) has published an Operational Continuity-Cyber Incident (OCCI) checklist which serves as a flexible template for responding to and recovering from serious cyberattacks that cause extended system outages, such as ransomware attacks. Ransomware attacks on healthcare organizations increased significantly during the pandemic and continue to be conducted at elevated levels. Ransomware threat actors steal sensitive data that has a high value on the black market, threaten to publish that data to pressure visitors into paying, and the extended system outages due to the attacks can cause considerable financial losses, increasing the probability of the ransom being paid. Warnings have recently been issued by the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) about ransomware groups that are actively targeting critical infrastructure, including healthcare organizations. In addition to cybercriminal groups, hospitals are a target for nation-state threat...
Salusive Health Closes Business Following Cyberattack
Salusive Health, the developer of the myNurse platform which helps physician practices streamline disease management, has experienced a cyberattack in which patient data was compromised. In its breach notification letters to patients, Salusive Health explained that it identified unauthorized activity within its computer network on March 7, 2022, and immediately implemented containment, mitigation, and restoration efforts, and engaged third-party cybersecurity experts to assist with those processes. The investigation confirmed that unauthorized individuals accessed the personal and protected health information of patients, including name, gender, home address, phone number, email address, date of birth, medical history, diagnosis and treatment information, dates of service, lab test results, prescription information, provider name, medical account number, health insurance policy and group plan number, group plan provider, and claim information. Salusive Health said it implemented additional security measures to prevent further breaches, has notified affected individuals and offered...
6 HIPAA-Regulated Entities Report Email Account Breaches and the Exposure of PHI
6 data breaches have recently been reported by HIPAA-regulated entities that have collectively resulted in the exposure and potential theft of the protected health information of tens of thousands of individuals. La Casa de Salud, New York The Acacia Network, a New York City-based human services organization, has recently notified the HHS’ Office for Civil Rights about an email account breach that was detected on July 17, 2020. According to the breach notice on the Acacia Network website, email accounts were accessed for a limited time between June 6, 2020, and June 12, 2020. An investigation was immediately launched and a forensic firm was engaged to provide assistance, but it was not possible to determine if any emails or attachments had been viewed or copied. A review of the emails in the account revealed they contained patients’ names, Social Security numbers, driver’s license numbers, addresses, birthdates financial account numbers, medical record numbers, resident identification numbers, health insurance information, Medicare numbers, provider names, treatment, prescription,...
WEDI Makes Healthcare-Specific Recommendations for Improving the NIST Cybersecurity Framework
The Workgroup for Electronic Data Interchange (WEDI) has responded to the request for information from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and has made several recommendations for improving the NIST cybersecurity framework and supply chain risk management guidance to help healthcare organizations deal with some of the most pressing threats facing the sector. Ransomware is one of the main threats facing the healthcare industry, and that is unlikely to change in the short to medium term. To help healthcare organizations deal with the threat, WEDI has suggested NIST increase its focus on ransomware and address the issue of ransomware directly in the cybersecurity framework. NIST published a new ransomware resource in February 2022, which contains valuable information on protecting against, detecting, responding to, and recovering from ransomware attacks. WEDI feels the inclusion of ransomware within the cybersecurity framework will expand the reach and impact of the resource. WEDI has also recommended the inclusion of specific case studies of healthcare...
15 Most Exploited Vulnerabilities in 2021
The Five Eyes security agencies, an alliance of intelligence agencies from Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States, have issued a joint advisory about the 15 vulnerabilities in software and operating systems that were most commonly targeted by nation-state hackers and cybercriminal organizations in 2021. Throughout 2021, malicious cyber actors targeted newly disclosed critical software vulnerabilities in attacks against a wide range of industry sectors, including public and private sector organizations. 11 of the most routinely targeted vulnerabilities were publicly disclosed in 2021, although older vulnerabilities continue to be exploited. The 15 most exploited vulnerabilities include 9 that allow remote code execution, 2 elevation of privilege flaws, and security bypass, path traversal, arbitrary file reading, and arbitrary code execution flaws. Top of the list was the maximum severity Log4Shell vulnerability in the Apache Log4j open source logging framework. The vulnerability – CVE-2021-44228 – can be remotely exploited by a threat actor...



