UChicago Accused of Illegally Sharing Patient Data with Google
A lawsuit has been filed by a former patient of UChicago Medicine who claims his medical records – and those of hundreds of thousands of other patients – have been shared with Google without authorization. UChicago Medicine, UChicago Medical Center, and Google have been named in the lawsuit. The suit claims patient information was shared with Google as part of study aimed to advance the use of artificial intelligence, but patient authorization was not obtained in advance and data were not properly deidentified. In 2017, UChicago Medicine started sending patient data to Google as part of a project to look at how historical health record data could be used to predict future medical events. Patient data were fed into a machine learning system which attempted to make health predictions about patients. The HIPAA Privacy Rule does not prohibit such disclosures, but prior to patient health information being disclosed, patients must either give their consent or protected health information must first be de-identified – Stripped of the 18 identifiers that allow protected health information...
5 Million Records Exposed Due to Unsecured MongoDB Marketing Database
A MongoDB database containing the personal records of around 5 million individuals has been left exposed on the internet. The database contained personal information and health data and belonged to MedicareSupplement.com, a website run by TZ Insurance Solutions which helps individuals find a Medigap insurance plan. Individuals looking for coverage can visit the website to find out more about suitable health plans and can obtain quotes by filling out an online form and entering their personal information. Researchers from Compariteh and security researcher Bob Diachenko discovered the database on May 13, 2019. The marketing database contains information such as name, address, telephone number, email address, IP address, date of birth, gender, and information relating to health, life, auto, and supplemental insurance. Around 239,000 records included the area of insurance interest. It is unclear how long the database was exposed, but it was indexed by the search engine BinaryEdge on May 10, 2019. The researchers reported the breach to MedicareSupplement.com but no response was...
Medtronic Recalls Insulin Pumps Due to Cybersecurity Risk
The United States Computer Emergency Readiness Team (US-CERT) and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) have issued alerts about cybersecurity flaws in certain Medtronic insulin pumps. The affected insulin pumps connect with other devices such as blood glucose meters, glucose sensor transmitters, and CareLink USB devices using wireless RF. Vulnerabilities have been identified in certain MiniMed 508 and MiniMed Paradigm insulin pumps which could allow an attacker with adjacent access to an affected product to intercept, modify, or interfere with the RF communications to or from the product. Consequently, it would be possible to read data sent to and from the device, alter the settings of the insulin pump, and take control of insulin delivery. An attack could therefore result in hypoglycemia, diabetic ketoacidosis, or death. The flaw – CVE-2019-10964 – is due to the communications protocol not properly implementing authentication or authorization and has been assigned a CVSS v3 base score of 7.1 out of 10. The flaw was uncovered by security researchers Nathanael Paul,...
HELP Committee Approves Bill Calling for HIPAA Enforcement Safe Harbor
The Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee has approved the Lower Health Care Costs (LHCC) Act of 2019, which has implications for HIPAA-covered entities. One of the main aims of the bill is to improve transparency of health care costs and service quality. The bill is intended to end surprise health bills and make sure patients are kept well informed about healthcare costs. The LHCC Act includes a provision that incentivizes healthcare organizations to adopt strong cybersecurity practices by calling for the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights to consider the organization’s good faith security efforts when making decisions about enforcement actions. The bipartisan bill passed the HELP committee by 20 votes to 3. The bill includes 54 different proposals from 65 senators. With the bill now passed, HELP committee chairman Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn) hopes to present the bill to the Majority and Minority Leaders for consideration by the full senate in July. Many healthcare organizations have been calling for OCR to consider adoption of...
OCR Clarifies Allowable Uses and Disclosures of PHI for Care Coordination and Continuity of Care
The Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights has issued new HIPAA guidance for health plans on how protected health information can be shared to support care coordination and continuity of care. The guidance, which is in the form of an FAQ, answers two questions commonly asked by health plans: Can PHI be disclosed to another health plan for care coordination purposes? OCR has confirmed that the HIPAA Privacy Rule allows PHI to be used and disclosed for healthcare operations, so it is possible to share PHI with another health plan or other covered entity if doing so is necessary for the entity’s own healthcare operations. PHI can also be shared with another health plan for the recipient’s healthcare operations provided the following conditions are met: Both entities have or had a relationship with the individual, the disclosure pertains to that relationship, and the healthcare operation is one permitted by HIPAA (See 45 CFR 164.502(a)(1)(ii); 45 CFR 164.506(c)(4)) Case management and care coordination are included in permitted ‘healthcare operations,’ so they...



