Ransomware Attacks Reported by Stockdale Radiology and Affordacare Urgent Care Clinics
Stockdale Radiology in California has announced that patient data has been compromised as a result of a ransomware attack on January 17, 2020. An internal investigation confirmed that the attackers gained access to patients’ first and last names, addresses, refund logs, and personal health information, including doctor’s notes. Stockdale Radiology said a limited number of patient files were publicly exposed by the attackers. Stockdale Radiology also discovered on January 29, 2020, that further patient information may have been accessed, but has not been publicly disclosed. Systems were immediately shut down to prevent any further unauthorized data access and a third-party computer forensics firm was engaged to investigate the breach and determine how access was gained and who was affected. The FBI was immediately notified about the attack and arrived at Stockdale Radiology within 30 minutes. The FBI investigation into the breach is ongoing. In response the attack, Stockdale Radiology has conducted a review of internal data management and its security protocols and has taken steps...
Vulnerability Identified in BD Pyxis MedStation and Pyxis Anesthesia (PAS) ES System
Becton, Dickinson and Company (BD) has identified a medium severity vulnerability in version 1.6.1 of the BD Pyxis MedStation medication dispensing system and the Pyxis Anesthesia (PAS) ES System of its anesthesia carts. If exploited, the vulnerability would allow an attacker to gain access to sensitive data. BD devices use a software application implementation called kiosk mode. When in kiosk mode, restrictions are in place that limit the actions that can be performed. The vulnerability is a protection mechanism failure (CWE-693) which could allow an attacker to escape the restricted desktop environment, which would allow sensitive data to be accessed and altered. The vulnerability only requires a low level of skill to exploit, but exploitation would require physical access to a vulnerable device. BD has performed a risk evaluation and has determined the risk of exploitation is low. As such, the vulnerability has been assigned a CVSS v3 base score of 6.8 out of 10. BD is proactive in assessing its products to identify security vulnerabilities. The company operates with...
CMS Announces Sweeping Regulatory Changes in Response to Surge in COVID-19 Patients
The Department of Health and Human Services’ Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has announced a set of sweeping regulatory changes and waivers to give healthcare providers maximum flexibility to treat patients during the 2019 Novel Coronavirus pandemic. The new changes will allow healthcare providers to act as healthcare delivery coordinators in their areas. The temporarily changes will ease restrictions are intended to create hospitals without walls, which will make it easier for hospitals and health systems to cope with an expected massive increase in COVID-19 patients over the coming weeks. Under normal circumstances, federal restrictions require hospitals to provide medical services within their existing facilities, but this will cease to be possible as patient numbers increase. As the number of COVID-19 cases grow, hospitals will soon reach capacity. If they do not develop additional sites to provide treatment to patients, they will be overwhelmed. To ensure all patients can receive treatment and no one is left behind, the CMS has relaxed restrictions and has...
$1 Million Settlement Agreed to Resolve American HomePatient Data Breach Lawsuit
A $1 million settlement proposed by American HomePatient to resolve a class action lawsuit filed on behalf of victims of a 2017 data breach has received preliminary approval. The data breach that was the subject of the lawsuit occurred on January 6, 2017. The offices of American HomePatient in Delaware were burgled, and thieves stole several computers. The hard drives were not encrypted and contained sensitive information such as names, addresses, dates of birth, Social Security numbers, AHOM account information, financial information, diagnosis codes, and treatment information of 13,000 current and former patients and customers of American HomePatient and Lincare Holdings Inc. Following the breach, a class action lawsuit was filed on behalf of victims of the breach who claimed American HomePatient was negligent for failing to encrypt sensitive data and, that by failing to do so, the thieves had easy access to their sensitive information. The lawsuit also alleged invasion of privacy, breach of implied contract, negligence per se, unjust enrichment, breach of fiduciary duty, and a...
California Business Associate Reports Potential Breach of Upwards of 70,000 Records
Stephan C Dean, the co-owner of the California record storage firm Surefile, reported a hacking/IT incident to the HHS’ Office for Civil Rights (OCR) on March 4, 2020 as impacting upwards of 70,000 individuals. Stephan Dean and his wife have been engaged in a long running legal dispute with Kaiser Permanente over the return and deletion of electronic files containing patient information. Kaiser Permanente has been trying to get the files permanently deleted; however, Stephan Dean insists that Kaiser Permanente owes him money for services rendered. The on-and-off legal action was eventually dropped, but the emails were never returned or deleted. Surefile worked with Kaiser Permanente and was provided with paper copies of medical records in 2008. When the agreement between Surefile and Kaiser Permanente ended, Stephan Dean returned the paper copies of the medical records to Kaiser Permanente; however, emails containing patient information that were sent to Stephan Dean by Kaiser Permanente remained on his computer. Stephan Dean filed a complaint with OCR over alleged HIPAA violations...



