Health Quest Patients Notified of Historic Phishing Breach
Health Quest has announced it has suffered a phishing attack that has resulted in the exposure of certain patients’ protected health information. The breach affected its affiliates Health Quest Medical Practice, Health Quest Urgent Care and Hudson Valley Newborn Physician Services, and the exposed information related to medical services provided to patients of those affiliates. According to the breach notice on the Health Quest website, on April 2, 2019, Quest Health learned that patient information was contained in emails and email attachments in several employee email accounts that had been compromised as a result of a phishing attack. Compromised protected health information included names, diagnoses, treatment information, dates of service, provider names, health insurance claims information and other information related to services received between January 2018 and June 2018. When the breach was detected, the accounts were secured, and a leading cybersecurity firm was engaged to assist with the investigation. Quest Health has since implemented multi factor authentication and...
40% of Healthcare Delivery Organizations Attacked with WannaCry Ransomware in the Past 6 Months
Healthcare organizations have been slow to correct the flaw in Remote Desktop Services that was patched by Microsoft on May 14, 2019, but a new report from cybersecurity firm Armis has revealed many healthcare organizations have still not patched the Windows Server Message Block (SMB) flaw that was exploited in the WannaCry ransomware and NotPetya wiper attacks in May and June 2017. The WannaCry attacks served as a clear reminder of the importance of prompt patching. Microsoft released patches for the vulnerability on March 2017. On May 12, 2017, the WannaCry ransomware attacks started. In the space of just a few days, more than 200,000 devices were infected in 150 countries. The hackers behind the attack used the NSA exploits EternalBlue and DoublePulsar to spread the malware across entire networks. The National Health Service (NHS) in the UK was hit particularly badly due to the extensive use of legacy systems and the failure to apply patches promptly. Around one third of NHS Trusts in the UK were affected, 19,000 appointments had to be cancelled at a cost of around £20 million,...
HELP Committee Calls for HHS to Recognize Good Faith Efforts to Improve Cybersecurity in its HIPAA Enforcement Activities
Enforcement of HIPAA compliance by the HHS’ Office for Civil Rights is viewed by many as overly punitive. Compliance investigations following complaints or data breaches often uncover violations of HIPAA Rules, which can lead to sizable financial penalties. Organizations that have adopted good cybersecurity best practices could still receive a financial penalty following a data breach, even though they have made reasonable efforts to improve their security posture. There have been calls for the HHS to take good faith efforts to improve cybersecurity into consideration when investigating breaches and to use discretion when considering enforcement actions. While the threat of financial penalties for should encourage healthcare organizations to invest more in cybersecurity defenses, some consider the HHS approach to be having the opposite effect. Why invest heavily in cybersecurity when the HHS could still issue a financial penalty over a data breach? An alternative approach, which is favored by several industry groups, is to incentivize healthcare entities to adopt strong...
Almost 1 Million Windows Devices Still Vulnerable to Microsoft BlueKeep RDS Flaw
More than two weeks after Microsoft issued a patch for a critical, wormable flaw in Remote Desktop Services, nearly 1 million devices have yet to have the patch applied and remain vulnerable. Those devices have also not had the recommended mitigations implemented to reduce the potential for exploitation of the flaw. The vulnerability – CVE-2019-0708 – can be exploited remotely with no user interaction required and could allow a threat actor to execute arbitrary code on a vulnerable device, view, change, or delete data, install programs, create admin accounts, and take full control of the device. It would also be possible to then move laterally and compromise other devices on the network. Microsoft has warned that the vulnerability could be exploited via RDP and could potentially be used in another WannaCry-style attack. Microsoft released patches for the vulnerability on May 14 and, due to the seriousness of the flaw, the decision was taken to also release patches for unsupported Windows versions. The flaw affects Windows XP, Windows 7, Windows 2003, Windows Server 2008, and...
Siemens Healthineers Products Vulnerable to Microsoft BlueKeep Wormable Flaw
Six security advisories have been issued covering Siemens Healthineers products. The flaws have been assigned a CVSS v3 score of 9.8 and concern the recently announced Microsoft BlueKeep RDS flaw – CVE-2019-0708. CVE-2019-0708 is a remotely exploitable flaw that requires no user interaction to exploit. An attacker could exploit the flaw and gain full control of a vulnerable device by sending specially crafted requests to Remote Desktop Services on a vulnerable device via RDP. The flaw is wormable and can be exploited to spread malware to all vulnerable devices on a network in a similar fashion to the WannaCry attacks of 2017. The severity of the vulnerability prompted Microsoft to issue patches for all vulnerable operating systems, including unsupported Windows versions which are still used in many healthcare and industrial facilities. The flaw affects Windows 2003, Windows XP, Windows 7, Windows Server 2008 and Windows Server 2008 R2. If the patch cannot be applied, RDP should be disabled, port 3389 should be blocked at the firewall, and Network Level Authentication (NLA) should...



