Vulnerability Identified in Becton Dickinson Pyxis Drug Dispensing Cabinets
Becton Dickinson (BD) has discovered a vulnerability in its Pyxis drug dispensing cabinets which could allow an unauthorized individual to use expired credentials to access patient data and medications. The vulnerability was discovered by BD, which self-reported the flaw to the Department of Homeland Security’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA). ICS-CERT has recently issued an advisory about the flaw. The vulnerability affects Pyxis ES versions 1.3.4 to 1.6.1 and Pyxis Enterprise Server with Windows Server versions 4.4 through 4.12. The vulnerability – tracked as CVE-2019-13517 – is a session fixation flaw in which existing access privileges are not properly coordinated with the expiration of access when a vulnerable device is joined to an Active Directory (AD) domain. This means the credentials of a previously authenticated user could be used to gain access to a vulnerable device under certain configurations. This would allow an attacker to obtain the same level of privileges as the user whose credentials are being used, which could give access to patient...
Most Patients Happy to Share EHR Data for Research, But Not Entire Medical Record
A majority of patients are comfortable with sharing their biospecimens and EHR data for research purposes, according to a new study published in JAMA Network Open; however, most patients want to restrict the sharing of at least one part of their medical record. Patients also exhibited preferences as to the institutions with whom their data and biospecimens were shared. Certain legislation covering the use of EHR data and biospecimens allow patient data to be shared for research purposes, either in identifiable or de-identified form, unless the patient explicitly opts out of data sharing. The researchers note that this all or nothing approach is problematic, as many patients are concerned about sharing certain types of information due to fears about secondary uses of their data. The researchers investigated the attitudes of 1,246 adults in the United States about a tiered consent approach to EHR record sharing. This approach splits an individual’s medical records into smaller parts, which allows patients to consent to sharing certain parts of their medical records and restricting...
Study Confirms Why Prompt Data Breach Notifications Are So Important
When healthcare organizations experience a data breach it is understandable that breach victims will be upset and angry. Information is provided to healthcare organizations in the understanding that safeguards have been implemented to keep that information private and confidential. When patients and health plan members learn that their sensitive, private information has been exposed or stolen, many choose to take their business elsewhere. According to a new study* by the credit reporting agency Experian, if the breach response is properly managed and the breached entity is transparent and issues notifications promptly, the customer churn rate can be kept to an absolute minimum. The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act’s (HIPAA) Breach Notification Rule requires notifications to be issued to breach victims ‘without unreasonable delay’ and no later than 60 days from the discovery of the breach. However, a majority of patients expect to be notified much more quickly. The study showed 73% of patients/plan members expect to be notified about a breach within 24 hours of...
Multiple Email Accounts Compromised in UC Health Phishing Attack
University of Cincinnati Health (UC Health) is investigating a security breach that saw the email accounts of multiple employees accessed by an unauthorized individual. The attack occurred between July 6 and July 12, 2019 and involved ‘a limited number’ of employee email accounts. An analysis of the compromised email accounts revealed they contained patients’ names, birth dates, medical record numbers, and some clinical information. A forensic analysis of UC Health email system was unable to establish whether the attackers opened or copied any emails or email attachments. UC Health is attempting to determine exactly which patients have been affected and notification letters will be sent “in the coming weeks.” UC Health announced the breach on its website on September 4, 2019. UC Health will be enhancing email security and re-educating employees to help them identify phishing and other malicious emails. The incident has not yet appeared on the HHS’ Office for Civil Rights website, so it is unknown how many patients have been affected. Conway Regional Medical Center Phishing Attack...
Artesia General Hospital Phishing Attack Impacts 13,905 Patients
Artesia General Hospital in Artesia, NM, has discovered the protected health information (PHI) of 13,905 patients has been compromised in a phishing attack. The breach was detected when an employee’s email account was discovered to have been used to send unauthorized emails. The breach was detected on June 18, 2019 and the forensic analysis revealed the account had been accessed by an unauthorized individual between June 11 to June 18. A leading computer forensics company was engaged to investigate the breach, but no evidence of data theft was discovered. To date, no reports have been received to suggest PHI has been stolen or misused. The email accounts contained patients’ names, birth dates, patient account numbers, medical record numbers, health insurance information, and some treatment and/or clinical information, such as diagnoses, dates of service, and provider names. A small subset of affected patients also had Social Security numbers exposed. The hospital has re-enforced security awareness training and additional measures are being implemented to improve email security....



