HIPAA Compliance and COVID-19 Coronavirus
HIPAA covered entities – healthcare providers, health plans, healthcare clearinghouses – and business associates of covered entities no doubt have many questions about HIPAA compliance and COVID-19 coronavirus cases. There may be confusion about the information that can be shared about individuals who have contracted COVID-19, those suspected of exposure to the 2019 Novel Coronavirus, and those with whom information can be shared. HIPAA Compliance and the COVID-19 Coronavirus Pandemic There is understandably concern about HIPAA compliance and the COVID-19 Coronavirus pandemic and how the HIPAA Privacy Rule and Security Rule apply. In the age of HIPAA, no disease outbreak on this scale has ever been experienced. It is important to remember that during a public health emergency such as a disease outbreak, and this applies to HIPAA compliance and COVID-19, that the HIPAA Privacy and Security Rules still apply. The HIPAA Security Rule ensures the security of patients’ protected health information (PHI) and requires reasonable safeguards to be implemented to protect PHI against...
HSCC Publishes Best Practices for Cyber Threat Information Sharing
The Healthcare and Public Health Sector Coordinating Council (HSCC) has published best practices for cyber threat information sharing. The new guidance document is intended to help healthcare organizations develop, implement, and maintain a successful cyber threat information sharing program to reduce cyber risk. The new document builds on previously published guidance – the Health Industry Cybersecurity Matrix of Information Sharing Organizations (HIC-MISO) – in which HSCC identified key Information Sharing and Analysis Organizations (ISAOs) for the healthcare sector. The latest guidance document helps organizations determine what information to share, how to share the information, and how to protect any sensitive information they receive, as well as providing best practices for obtaining internal and legal approvals for information sharing processes. One of the main benefits of participating in these programs is to learn about possible attacks and the mitigations to implement to avoid becoming a victim. If an attack occurs at one healthcare organization, it is...
Henry Mayo Newhall Hospital Fires Employees for Snooping on Medical Records
Henry Mayo Newhall Hospital in Santa Clarita, CA has fired several employees for snooping on the medical records of the Saugus High School shooter. Under Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) Rules, hospital staff are only permitted to access the medical records of patients with whom they have a treatment relationship of if there is an otherwise legitimate business relationship for accessing the records. The HIPAA Security Rule requires HIPAA-covered entities to implement mechanisms to record activity in information systems containing patient’s electronic protected health information and regularly review records of system activity to identify unauthorized access. A sanctions policy is also required, which must be applied when members of the workforce violate patient privacy. On November 14, 2009, a student of Saugus High School shot five students, killing two before turning the pistol on himself. The shooter was taken to Henry Mayo Newhall Hospital where he died the following day. An analysis of system activity logs revealed several employees at the hospital...
83% of Medical Devices Run on Outdated Operating Systems
The current state of IoT device security has been investigated by the Unit 42 team at Palo Alto Networks which identified major risks to the confidentiality, integrity and availability of healthcare data and serious vulnerabilities that could easily be exploited in devastating cyberattacks. The Unit 42 team analyzed more that 1.2 million IoT devices of 8,000 different types across a range of industry sectors for the 2020 IoT Threat Report. Data was gathered from its Zingbox IoT inventory and management service, which included 73.2 billion network sessions. The researchers found high numbers of IoT devices that use legacy protocols and unsupported operating systems, a problem that has now got worse since support for Windows 7 stopped in January 2020. Unit 42’s research revealed only 17% of devices have active support for their underlying operating systems. In healthcare, 83% of IoT devices were running on unsupported operating systems, which increased 56% from last year following the end of support for Windows 7. 27% of IoT medical devices are still running on Windows XP and...
90% of Healthcare Organizations Have Experienced an Email-Based Attack in the Past Year
A recently published study conducted by HIMSS Media on behalf of Mimecast has revealed 90% of healthcare organizations have experienced at least one email-based threat in the past 12 months. 72% have experienced downtime as a result and one in four said the attacks were very or extremely disruptive. Healthcare organizations are a major target for cybercriminals. They hold large quantities of personal and health information that can be used for many fraudulent purposes, email-based attacks are easy to perform and require little technical skill, and they often give a high return on investment. Healthcare email security defenses also lag behind other industry sectors and security awareness training is often overlooked. The study was conducted in November 2019 on 101 individuals that had significant involvement with email security at hospitals and health systems in the United States. 3 out of 4 respondents said they have or are in the process of rolling out a comprehensive cyber resilience program, but only 56% of respondents said they already have such a strategy in place. When asked...



