PHI of 10,893 Summa Health Patients Potentially Compromised in Phishing Attack
Akron, Ohio-based Summa Health has discovered an unauthorized individual has gained access to four employee email accounts containing patients’ protected health information (PHI). Summa Health became aware of the breach on May 1, 2019 and launched an investigation that revealed 2 email accounts had been breached in August 2018, and a further two accounts between March 11, 2019 and March 29, 2019. All four accounts were immediately secured and a third-party computer forensics firm was hired to determine whether any patient information had been accessed or stolen. The firm found no evidence of data theft or PHI access, although it was not possible to rule out the possibility that patient information was compromised in the breach. An analysis of the compromised accounts revealed they contained the following types of PHI: Patient names, dates of birth, medical record numbers, patient account numbers, clinical information, and treatment information. In total, 10,893 patients were affected. A small subset of those patients also had their Social Security numbers and/or driver’s license...
Student Sues Hospital for Unauthorized Use of PHI as Teaching Tool
A medical student is suing Marshall University and Cabell Huntington Hospital over the impermissible disclosure of some of his protected health information (PHI) to a class of students. The student, who is identified as J.M.A in the lawsuit, claims his x-rays were used as a teaching tool by a professor at Marshall University Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine, but information identifying J.M.A. as the patient had not been removed or redacted from the images. The matter had been brought to the attention of the university by another faculty member. On April 15, 2018, the dean of the medical school wrote to J.M.A to inform him of the privacy violation. The university was unaware that the professor was using the image as a teaching tool. J.M.A. claims he has suffered shame, embarrassment, humiliation, and severe anxiety as a direct result of the disclosure of his identity. It is unclear how many people viewed J.M.A’s x-rays and how many of those individuals disclosed what they saw to others. J.M.A is represented by Troy N. Giatras, Matthew W. Stonestreet, and Phillip A. Childs of The...
Smaller Healthcare Providers Struggling to Implement Healthcare Cybersecurity Best Practices
A recent study of cybersecurity best practices adopted by large and small healthcare providers has revealed there is a growing gulf between the two. Larger providers are more likely to have mature, sophisticated cybersecurity defenses, while smaller providers are struggling to follow cybersecurity best practices. For the study, KLAS and CHIME analyzed responses to the 2018 Healthcare’s Most Wanted survey given by around 600 healthcare providers and assessed each to determine whether they were adhering to healthcare cybersecurity best practices. One of the requirements of the Cybersecurity Act of 2015 was for the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to form a task group to develop guidance for healthcare providers to help them manage and mitigate threats to patient data. The 405(d) Task Group released the document – Health Industry Cybersecurity Practices: Managing Threats and Protecting Patients (HICP) – which details 10 cybersecurity principles relevant to healthcare providers of all sizes. These principles must be addressed to ensure cybersecurity risks are...
CMS Uses Weak ID Verification and Has No Plans to Change
According to a recent Government Accountability Office (GAO) audit, the Department of Health and Human Services’ Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) is using an outdated and weak method of remote ID verification which is no longer considered to provide sufficient protection against fraud. The CMS website, which is used to find federal income-based financial subsidies and private health insurance, uses knowledge-based verification to confirm an individual’s identity. Individuals are asked to confirm their name, address and date of birth and are then asked questions to which only they would know the answer, such as information found in their credit file. While knowledge-based ID verification based on entries in a credit file does provide a good level of security, that all changed with the massive data breach at Equifax. A great deal of personal information was stolen by hackers – information that could be used to answer security questions. Without a more secure system of ID verification, Americans will be at risk of fraud. There are several alternative methods for ID...
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...



