South Texas Dermatopathology Notifies 15,982 Patients About AMCA Data Breach
South Texas Dermatopathology is the last known victim of the data breach at American Medical Collection Agency (AMCA) to report the breach to the Department of Health and Human Services Office for Civil Rights (OCR) and notify affected patients. The breach appeared on the OCR breach portal on October 7, 2019 and indicates 15,982 patients have been affected. AMCA was a business associate of the San Antonio, TX-based medical testing laboratory and provided billings and collection services. South Texas Dermatopathology was informed about the security breach at AMCA in May 2019 and was told that some of its patients’ information was potentially compromised as a result of the hacking of AMCA systems. An unauthorized individual first gained access to AMCA systems on August 1, 2018. Access remained possible up to March 30, 2019 when the breach was detected and its systems were secured. During that time, the unauthorized individual had access to parts of AMCA systems that contained information such as names, addresses, phone numbers, dates of birth, balance information, dates of service,...
September 2019 Healthcare Data Breach Report
September saw 36 healthcare data breaches of more than 500 records reported to the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights, which represents a 26.53% decrease in breaches from the previous month. 1,957,168 healthcare records were compromised in those breaches, an increase of 168.11% from August. The large number of breached records is largely down to four reported incidents, each of which involved hundreds of thousands of healthcare records. Three of those incidents have been confirmed as ransomware attacks. Largest Healthcare Data Breaches in September 2019 The largest breach of the month was due to a ransomware attack on Jacksonville, FL-based North Florida OB-GYN, part of Women’s Care of Florida. 528,188 healthcare records were potentially compromised as a result of the attack. Sarrell Dental also experienced a ransomware attack in which the records of 391,472 patients of its Alabama clinics were encrypted. 320,000 records of patients of Premier Family Medical in Utah were also potentially compromised in a ransomware attack. The University of Puerto Rico...
VA OIG: Records of Thousands of Veterans Exposed to 25,000 VA Employees via Shared Network Drives
Internal Department of Veteran Affairs (VA) communications, disability claims, and the health information of thousands of veterans have been exposed and could be accessed by VA employees authorized to view the information, according to the findings of a Department of Veteran Affairs’ Office of Inspector General (VA OIG) audit. VA OIG conducted an audit of the VA’s Milwaukee Regional Office following a tipoff by a whistleblower in September 2018 about the exposure of sensitive information on shared network drives, which the whistleblower claimed could be accessed by employees unauthorized to view the information. VA OIG audit visited the Milwaukee offices in January 2019 and confirmed that sensitive information had been stored on two shared network drives on the VA Enterprise network, which could be accessed by veterans service organization (VSO) officers, even if those officers did not represent those veterans. The auditors determined that any Veterans Benefits Administration employee who had permission to access the VA network remotely could have accessed the files stored on the...
Microsoft and NCCoE Start Working on Guidelines for Implementing an Effective Enterprise Patch Management Strategy
A new project has been launched by Microsoft and the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) National Cybersecurity Center of Excellence (NCCoE) to develop guidance on developing and implementing an effective patch management strategy. Following the (Not)Petya wiper attacks in 2017, Microsoft embarked on a voyage of discovery into why companies had failed to exercise basic cybersecurity hygiene and had not patched their systems, even though patches had been released months previously and could have protected against the attacks. Over the past 12 months, feedback has been sought from the Department of Homeland Security, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), and the Center for Internet Security on the risk of exploitation and patch management strategies. Microsoft has also sat down with customers to find out more about the challenges they face applying patches and to discover exactly why patching is often delayed and why in some cases patches are not applied. These meetings revealed many companies were unsure about what they should be doing in...
Ransomware Attacks Reported by Monterey Health Center and Magnolia Pediatrics
Monterey Health Center in Milwaukie, OR, has experienced a ransomware attack that encrypted its electronic medical records system. The attack commenced on August 12, 2019 and prevented patient data from being accessed. Assisted by a third-party vendor, the health center successfully restored all patient data quickly and was able to continue providing care to its patients. It is unclear whether the medical records were restored from backups or if the ransom demand was paid. Third party forensic investigators were retained to investigate the attack and determine whether patient data had been copied by the attackers. The investigation found no evidence of data exfiltration, although unauthorized data access could not be totally ruled out. To date, no reports have been received about any misuse of patient information. The following information was potentially compromised: Names, addresses, dates of birth, Social Security numbers, driver’s license numbers, medical histories, diagnoses, lab test results, treatment information, medications, health insurance information, claims...



