Tens of Thousands of TennCare and Florida Blue Members Impacted Business Associate Phishing Attack
Further healthcare organizations have confirmed they have been affected by a data breach at Magellan Health National Imaging Associates, a business associate of several HIPAA-covered entities that provides managed pharmacy and radiology benefits services. Danville, PA-based Geisinger Health Plan announced last month that 5,848 of its members had been affected by the breach and Albuquerque, NM-based Presbyterian Health Plan has confirmed that 56,226 of its members have been affected. In the past few days, health insurance company Florida Blue and the Tennessee state Medicaid program, TennCare, have made similar announcements. The phishing attack occurred on May 28, 2019. Magellan Health NIA learned of the breach on July 5, 2019 and took action to secure the affected email account. The breach was detected when the compromised account was used to send out large quantities of spam email. The internal investigation confirmed that the mailbox had been accessed on several occasions by an individual based outside the United States. The purpose of the attack appears to have been solely to...
Google Confirms it has Legitimate Access to Millions of Ascension Patients’ Health Records
Following a report in the Wall Street Journal, Google has confirmed it is collaborating with one of the largest healthcare systems in the United States, which gives it access to a huge volume of patient data. Google has partnered Ascension, the world’s largest catholic health system and the second largest non-profit health system in the United States. Ascension operates more than 2,600 healthcare facilities in 21 states, including 150 hospitals and over 50 senior living facilities. The collaboration has given Google access to patient health information such as names, dates of birth, medical test results, diagnoses, treatment information, service dates, and other personal and clinical information. The project – code name Project Nightingale – had been kept under the radar prior to the WSJ Report, which claimed that at least 150 Google employees have allegedly been able to access patient data as part of the project and that access to patient data had been granted without patients or physicians being informed. Both Google and Ascension made announcements about the Project...
Sen. Warner Demands Answers from HHS Over Apparent Lack of Response to Major PACS Data Breach
U.S. Senator, Mark. R. Warner (D-VA) has written to the Director of the HHS’ Office for Civil Rights, Roger Severino, expressing concern over the HHS response to the mass exposure of medical images by U.S. healthcare organizations. Sen. Warner is the Vice Chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee and co-founder of the Senate Cybersecurity Caucus. This is the latest in a series of communications in which he has voiced concerns about cybersecurity failures that have compromised the personal and private information of Americans. In February, Sen. Warner demanded answers from HHS agencies, NIST, and healthcare associations about healthcare cybersecurity following the continued increase in healthcare data breaches. His recent letter to OCR was in response to a September 17, 2019 report about the exposure of millions of Americans’ medical images that were stored in unsecured picture archiving and communications systems (PACS). The report detailed the findings of an investigation by ProPublica, German public broadcaster Bayerischer Rundfunk, and vulnerability and analysis firm,...
Microsoft Issues Fresh Warning to Patch BlueKeep Vulnerability
Prompt patching, or rather the lack of it, has prompted a fresh round of warnings to patch the BlueKeep vulnerability (CVE-2019-0708) that was exploited in a mass attack that started on October 23. The attack was first detected on November 2, with the delay due to the failure of the attacker to take full advantage of the vulnerability. The campaign appears to have been conducted by a low-level threat actor who exploited the vulnerability to deliver cryptocurrency mining malware. Microsoft has issued yet another warning that worse is yet to come. The first mass exploitation attempt certainly made the headlines, but it does not appear to have had much of an impact on the speed of patching. A scan conducted by the SANS Institute shows there has been little change in the rate of patching following the attacks. The number of unpatched devices has been steadily declining since Microsoft issued the patch in May, but hundreds of thousands of devices are still vulnerable to attack. The attack was on a large scale, albeit with limited success. The exploit that was used failed to work...
HHS Increases Civil Monetary Penalties for HIPAA Violations in Line with Inflation
The U.S Department of Health and Human Services has increased the civil monetary penalties for HIPAA compliance violations in accordance with the Inflation Adjustment Act. The final rule took effect on Tuesday November 5, 2019. This rule increases the civil monetary penalties for HIPAA violations that occurred on or after February 18, 2009. Under the new penalty structure, the increases from 2018 to 2019 are detailed in the table below: Penalty Tier Level of Culpability Minimum Penalty per Violation (2018 » 2019) Maximum Penalty per Violation (2018 » 2019) New Maximum Annual Penalty (2018 » 2019)* 1 No Knowledge $114.29 » $117 $57,051 » $58,490 $1,711,533 » $1,754,698 2 Reasonable Cause $1,141 » $1,170 $57,051 » $58,490 $1,711,533 » $1,754,698 3 Willful Neglect – Corrective Action Taken $11,410 » $11,698 $57,051 » $58,490 $1,711,533 » $1,754,698 4 Willful Neglect – No Corrective Action Taken $57,051 » $58,490 $1,711,533 » $1,754,698 $1,711,533 » $1,754,698 Penalties for HIPAA violations that occurred prior to February 18, 2009 have increased to $159 per violation, with an annual...



