Vulnerabilities in OpenClinic Application Could Allow Unauthorized PHI Access
Four vulnerabilities have been identified in the OpenClinic application, the most severe of which could allow authentication to be bypassed and protected health information (PHI) to be viewed from the application by unauthorized users. OpenClinic is an open source, PHP-based health record management software that is used in many private clinics, hospitals, and physician practices for administration, clinical and financial tasks. A BishopFox Labs researcher has identified four vulnerabilities in the software which have yet to be corrected. The most serious vulnerability involves missing authentication, which could be exploited to gain access to any patient’s medical test results. Authenticated users of the platform can upload patient’s test results to the application, which are loaded into the /tests/ directory. Requests for files in that directory do not require users to be authenticated to the application to return and display the test results. In order for the test results to be obtained, an unauthenticated user would need to guess the names of the files; however, the BishopFox...
Researchers Describe Possible Synthetic DNA Supply Chain Attack
A team of researchers at Ben-Gurion University in Israel have described a possible bioterrorist attack scenario in which the supply chain of synthetic DNA could be compromised. DNA synthesis providers could be tricked into producing harmful DNA sequences and delivering them to unsuspecting customers. Synthetic DNA is currently produced for research purposes and is available in many ready-to-use forms. Clients of DNA synthesis providers specify the DNA sequences they require and the DNA synthesis company generates the requested sequences to order and ships them to their customers. There are safety controls in place to prevent DNA being synthesized that could be harmful, but the Ben-Gurion University researchers point out that those safety checks are insufficient. Hackers could potentially exploit security weaknesses and inject rogue genetic information into the synthesis process, unbeknown to the customers or DNA synthesis providers. For example, rogue genetic material could be inserted that encodes for a harmful protein or a toxin. The researchers describe an attack scenario where...
Email Account Breaches Reported by University of Minnesota Physicians and McLeod Health
University of Minnesota Physicians has suffered a phishing attack that gave the attackers access to the email accounts of two employees. One email account was accessible between January 30 and January 31, 2020 and the other on February 4, 2020 for a short period of time. Upon discovery of the breach, the accounts were immediately secured, and third-party forensic investigators were engaged to assess the nature and scope of the breach. The review did not uncover any evidence to suggest emails in the accounts had been viewed or patient data obtained, but it was not possible to rule out data access with a sufficiently high degree of certainty. A review of the compromised accounts revealed they contained the protected health information of certain patients. The types of information in the accounts varied from patient to patient and may have included name, address, date of birth, date of death, date of service, telephone number, medical record number, account number, payment card number, health insurance information, and medical information. A limited number of individuals also had...
Healthcare Provider Discovers Patient Data Exposed Online for Over 4 Years
A round up of healthcare data breaches recently reported by Fairchild Medical Center, Harvard Pilgrim Health Care, and Indian Health Council Inc. Fairchild Medical Center Discovers Patient Information has been Exposed Online Fairchild Medical Center in Yreka, CA, has started notifying certain patients that some of their protected health information may have been accessed by unauthorized individuals over the Internet. In July 2020, Fairchild Medical Center was notified by a third-party security company that a server had been misconfigured, which allowed it to be accessed via the Internet. Assisted by third-party computer specialists, the medical center determined patient information could potentially have been accessed by unauthorized individuals. The server contained medical images along with patient names, dates of birth, patient identification numbers, exam identification numbers, ordering provider names, and exam dates. The misconfiguration had occurred on December 16, 2015 and was not corrected until July 31, 2020. After changes were made to secure the server, they were...
More Than 295K Patients Impacted by Cyberattack on AspenPointe
The Colorado Springs-based mental health and behavioral health services provider AspenPointe has announced it was the victim of a cyberattack in September 2020 in which patient information may have been compromised. The attack forced the healthcare provider to take its systems offline and most of its operations were affected for several days while the attack was mitigated. Third-party cybersecurity professionals were engaged to assist with the investigation and recovery efforts and determine the extent to which patient information may have been compromised. A review of the documents potentially accessible to the attackers revealed on November 10, 2020 that patient information had potentially been accessed or acquired. The documents on the breached systems contained patient names along with one or more of the following data elements: date of birth, driver’s license number, bank account information, Medicaid ID number, admission/discharge dates, diagnosis code, date of last visit, and/or Social Security number. Following the discovery of the breach, a password reset was performed....



