Cyberattack on SuperCare Health Affects 318,000 Patients
SuperCare Health, a Downey, CA-based post-acute, in-home respiratory care provider serving the Western United States, has recently started notifying 318,379 patients that some of their protected health information has been exposed and potentially accessed by unauthorized individuals in a cyberattack that occurred in July 2021. In its March 25, 2022, breach notification letters, SuperCare Health explained that it identified unauthorized activity within its IT systems on July 27, 2021. Steps were immediately taken to secure its network and prevent further unauthorized access, and independent cybersecurity experts were engaged to investigate the nature and scope of the incident. The investigation determined that unauthorized individuals had access to parts of its network from July 23, 2021, to July 27, 2021, and that it was possible that files on the network were accessed that contained patients’ protected health information. A comprehensive review of the contents of the files was conducted, which determined on February 4, 2022, that they contained sensitive patient data such as...
NCCoE Releases Final Guidance on Effective Enterprise Patch Management
The National Cybersecurity Center of Excellence (NCCoE) has released the final versions of two Special Publications that provide guidance on enterprise patch management practices to prevent the exploitation of vulnerabilities in IT systems. Cybercriminals and nation-state threat actors target unpatched vulnerabilities in software, operating systems, and firmware to gain access to business networks to steal sensitive data and disrupt operations. It is vital for all organizations to ensure patches and software/firmware updates are implemented promptly to prevent exploitation. “Patching is a critical component of preventive maintenance for computing technologies—a cost of doing business, and a necessary part of what organizations need to do in order to achieve their missions,” explained NCCoE. “It helps prevent compromises, data breaches, operational disruptions, and other adverse events.” While the importance of prompt patching is well understood by IT, security, and technology management, the importance and value of patching is typically less well understood by organizations’...
OCR Seeks Comment on Recognized Security Practices and the Sharing of HIPAA Settlements
The Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights has released a Request for information (RFI) related to two outstanding requirements of the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act of 2009 (HITECH Act). The HITECH Act, as amended in 2021 by the HIPAA Safe Harbor Act, requires the HHS consider the security practices that have been implemented by HIPAA-regulated entities when considering financial penalties and other remedies to resolve potential HIPAA violations discovered during investigations and audits. The aim of the HIPAA Safe Harbor Act is to encourage HIPAA-regulated entities to implement cybersecurity best practices. The reward for organisations that have followed industry-standard security best practices for the 12 months prior to a data breach occurring is lower financial penalties for data breaches and less scrutiny by the HHS . Another outstanding requirement that dates back to when the HITECH Act was signed into law, is for the HHS to share a percentage of the civil monetary penalties (CMPs) and settlement payments...
Audit of the Connecticut Health Insurance Exchange Uncovers 44 Unreported Data Breaches
An audit of Connecticut’s Health Insurance Exchange, Access Health CT, by the state auditor has revealed Access Health CT suffered 44 data breaches over the last 3.5 years that had not been fully reported and that sufficient steps had not been taken to safeguard sensitive data. The Connecticut Health Insurance Exchange acts as a health insurance marketplace to reduce the number of state residents who do not have health insurance and to facilitate applications by low-income individuals for Medicaid coverage, as required under The Affordable Care Act. While Access Health had reported the data breaches to the Department of Health and Human Services, as required by HIPAA, and the state attorney general had been notified, the breaches had not been reported to the state auditor and comptroller. Under state law, the Connecticut Health Insurance Exchange is required to notify the Auditors of Public Accounts and the State Comptroller promptly when a security breach is discovered. The majority of the data breaches were small incidents, with most of the breaches (34) involving a Hampton,...
The PATCH Act Introduced to Improve Medical Device Cybersecurity
A bipartisan pair of senators have introduced the Protecting and Transforming Cyber Health Care (PATCH) Act which aims to improve the security of medical devices. Vulnerabilities are often identified in medical devices that could potentially be exploited by threat actors to change the functionality of the devices, render them inoperable, or to allows the devices to be used as a springboard for more extensive attacks on healthcare networks. Over the course of the pandemic, cyberattacks on healthcare organizations have increased, and medical devices and the networks to which they connect have been affected by ransomware attacks. These attacks have affected hospitals, patients, and the medical device industry. U.S. Senators Bill Cassidy, M.D. (R-LA) and Tammy Baldwin (D-WI) introduced the PATCH Act to ensure that the U.S. healthcare system’s cyber infrastructure remains safe and secure. The PATCH Act will update the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act to require all premarket submissions for medical devices to include details of the cybersecurity protections that have been...



