73 Email Accounts Compromised in Major Phishing Attack on NCH Healthcare System
The importance of security awareness training for healthcare employees has been highlighted by a recent phishing attack on Bonita Springs, FL-based NCH Healthcare System. The attack was detected on June 14, 2019 when suspicious email activity was identified in relation to its payroll system. The investigation revealed a staggering 73 employees had responded to phishing emails and disclosed their account credentials to the scammers. It is common for healthcare organizations to identify an email account breach and later discover the attack was more extensive than originally thought. Oftentimes, several emails accounts are discovered to have been compromised, often as a result of lateral phishing – the use of one compromised email account to send phishing emails to other individuals in the organization. However, a breach as extensive as this is fortunately rare. NCH Healthcare system is still investigating the attack and is being assisted by a third-party computer forensics firm. The initial findings of the investigation suggest the attackers were not concerned with obtaining PHI,...
OCR Offers Advice on Managing Malicious Insider Threats
Healthcare organizations can implement robust defenses to prevent hackers from gaining access to sensitive data, but not all threats come from outside the organization. It is also important to implement policies, procedures, and technical solutions to detect and prevent attacks from within. Healthcare employees require access to protected health information (PHI) to perform their work duties. While those individuals may be deemed trustworthy, providing access to PHI exposes the organization to risk. Workers can go rogue and access patient information without authorization and could easily abuse their access rights and steal patient data for financial gain. There will always be the occasional bad apple, but the 2019 Verizon Data Breach Investigations Report suggests the problem is far more prevalent. According to the report, 59% of all security incidents and data breaches analyzed for the report were caused by insiders. Many of those breaches were due to mistakes made by healthcare employees, but a significant percentage were caused by malicious insiders who stole patient...
Ransomware Attack Impacts More Than 400 U.S. Dental Practices
A ransomware attack on a medical record backup service has prevented hundreds of dental practices in the United States from accessing their patients’ records. The attack occurred on August 26, 2019 and affected the DDS Safe backup solution developed by Wisconsin-based software company, Digital Dental Record (DDS). The DDS system was accessed via an attack on its cloud management provider, West Allis, WI-based PerCSoft. Ironically, the DDS website states DDS Safe helps to protect dental practices against ransomware attacks. The attack did not affect all dental practices using the DDS Safe solution. Initial reports suggest between 400 and 500 of the 900 dental practices using the solution have been affected by the REvil/Sodinokibi ransomware attack. PerCSoft, assisted by a third-party software company, has obtained a decryptor and is in the process of recovering the encrypted files. According to a statement from DDS, recovery of files is estimated to take between 30 minutes to 4 hours per client. Some dental practices have reported file loss as a result of the attack and others have...
33,370 Mount Sinai Hospital Patients Impacted by AMCA Breach
Mount Sinai Hospital has discovered the protected health information (PHI) of 33,730 patients was compromised in the cyberattack on American Medical Collection Agency (AMCA). The hospital is the 24th known victim of the massive AMCA breach, which has affected almost 25 million patients. AMCA notified Mount Sinai Hospital on June 4, 2019 that an unauthorized individual had gained access to a web payment page, through which the PHI of its clients’ patients could be accessed. The webpage was compromised on August 1, 2018 and unauthorized access continued until March 30, 2019 when the breach was discovered and the web page was secured. The breach only affected patients with outstanding medical bills that had been passed to AMCA for collection. The breach involved names, name of lab or medical service provider, dates of service, referring physician’s name, health insurance information, and other medical information related to the services provided by Mount Sinai. Some patients also had financial information exposed. Those individuals were notified directly by AMCA and offered credit...
Georgia Court of Appeals to Decide Whether Athens Orthopedic Data Breach Victims Are Entitled to Damages
A class action lawsuit filed by victims of a June 2016 cyberattack on Athens Orthopedic in Georgia has gone before the Georgia Supreme Court to determine whether breach victims are entitled to recover damages. The cyberattack in question saw the personal information, Social Security numbers, and health insurance information of approximately 200,000 individuals stolen by the hacking group, Dark Overlord. The Dark Overlord has conducted numerous attacks on healthcare organizations in the United States over the past three years. Initially, attacks were conducted to steal sensitive data, which was subsequently sold on dark web marketplaces. More recently, attacks have involved data theft and extortion. A ransom demand is issued to breached entities that must be paid in order to prevent publication of the stolen data. Athens Orthopedic did not pay the ransom demand. The Dark Overlord gained access to Athens Orthopedic’s systems via an attack on a “nationally-known health care information management contractor,” the login credentials of which were used to steal patient data. Athens...



