Study Reveals Types of Protected Health Information Most Commonly Exposed in Healthcare Data Breaches
Researchers from Michigan State University and Johns Hopkins University have conducted a study of healthcare data breaches of protected health information over the past 10 years to examine what types of information are most commonly exposed in healthcare data breaches. The study, published in the journal Annals of Internal Medicine on Monday, September 23, 2019, confirms that the health information of approximately 169 million Americans was exposed, compromised, or impermissibly disclosed in 1,461 data breaches at 1,388 entities between October 2009 and July 2019. Those breaches each impacted 500 or more individuals and were reportable incidents under HIPAA and the HITECH Act. The researchers explain that information about the types of information exposed in data breaches is not widely available to the public, since it is not a requirement to share the types of data that have been compromised in the breaches. It is therefore difficult for researchers to classify the amount and types of healthcare information exposed and gain an accurate picture of the consequences of the breaches....
August 2019 Healthcare Data Breach Report
In August, healthcare data breaches continued to be reported at a rate of more than 1.5 per day, which is around twice the monthly average in 2018 (29.5 breaches per month). This is the second successive month when breaches have been reported at such an elevated level. While the number of breaches has not changed much since last month (49 compared to 50), there has been a substantial reduction in the number of exposed records. August saw 729,975 healthcare records breached compared to 25,375,729 records in July, 3,452,442 records in June, and 1,988,376 records in May. The exceptionally high breach total for July was mostly due to the massive data breach at American Medical Collection Agency (See below for an update on the AMCA breach total). Causes of August 2019 Healthcare Data Breaches Hacking and other IT incidents dominated the breach reports in August. 32 breaches were attributed to hacking/IT incidents, which is almost double the number of breaches from all other causes. Hacking/IT incidents breached 602,663 healthcare records – 82.56% of all records breached in...
Thousands of Fetal Remains and Abandoned Medical Records Discovered in Indiana
The late Dr. Ulrich Klopfer, who operated three abortion clinics in Indiana up until the suspension of his license in 2015, has been discovered to have removed fetal remains from his clinics. The remains were discovered by family members while sorting through his personal belongings at his Illinois home following his death on September 3, 2019. Authorities investigating the discovery have announced that that 2,246 medically preserved fetal remains were found at the property. The remains are believed to have been removed from his clinics. No evidence has been uncovered to suggest any procedures were performed at the property. Indiana Attorney General Hill described Dr. Klopfer as “one of the most notorious abortionists in the history of Indiana” with “a record of deplorable conditions and violations of regulatory controls.” His license was suspended in 2015 over multiple violations of state laws, including improper record keeping, a failure to report a case of the rape of a minor following an abortion procedure, and violations of state waiting periods. Dr. Klopfer lost his...
Campbell County Health Ransomware Attack Causes Major Disruption to Patient Services
Campbell County Health in Gillette, WY, has experienced a ransomware attack that has disabled hospital systems and is preventing access to patient information. The attack started in the early hours of Friday, September 20, 2019, according to the Department of Health. An investigation into the attack has been launched and efforts are continuing to remove the ransomware, restore encrypted files, and bring systems back online; however, at the time of writing, Campbell County Health is continuing to experience a major disruption to medical services. Campbell County Health reports that all of its systems have been affected. At this stage, no evidence has been uncovered to suggest patient information has been subjected to unauthorized access or misused. The Emergency Department, Maternal Child (OB) department and the Walk-In Clinic remain open and staff are on hand to triage and treat patients. Transfers to alternate facilities will be arranged, if appropriate, and the County’s Emergency Medical Services (EMS) has additional ambulances to meet demand. Patients already receiving care are...
56,226 Presbyterian Health Plan Members Affected by Phishing Attacks at Magellan Health Subsidiaries
The Scottsdale, AZ-based managed care company, Magellan Health, has discovered two of its subsidiaries have experienced phishing attacks that exposed the protected health information of members of Albuquerque, NM-based Presbyterian Health Plan. The phishing attacks were experienced by National Imaging Associates and Magellan Healthcare, which both provide services to Presbyterian Health Plan. Both incidents were reported to the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights on September 17, 2019. The National Imaging Associates incident was discovered on July 5 and affected 589 individuals and the Magellan Healthcare breach was discovered on July 12 and affected 55,637 individuals. Both incidents occurred within a few days but they are not believed to be related. The email accounts of two employees were breached on May 28 and June 6, 2019. Both of those individuals handled data related to members of the health plan. The investigation determined the aim of the attack was to compromise email accounts to use them to distribute spam email. No evidence was uncovered to...



