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The HIPAA Journal is the leading provider of HIPAA training, news, regulatory updates, and independent compliance advice.

Steve Alder

Steve Alder is the editor-in-chief of The HIPAA Journal. Steve is responsible for editorial policy regarding the topics covered in The HIPAA Journal. He is a specialist on healthcare industry legal and regulatory affairs, and has 10 years of experience writing about HIPAA and other related legal topics. Steve has developed a deep understanding of regulatory issues surrounding the use of information technology in the healthcare industry and has written hundreds of articles on HIPAA-related topics. Steve shapes the editorial policy of The HIPAA Journal, ensuring its comprehensive coverage of critical topics. Steve Alder is considered an authority in the healthcare industry on HIPAA. The HIPAA Journal has evolved into the leading independent authority on HIPAA under Steve’s editorial leadership. Steve manages a team of writers and is responsible for the factual and legal accuracy of all content published on The HIPAA Journal. Steve holds a Bachelor’s of Science degree from the University of Liverpool. You can connect with Steve via LinkedIn or email via stevealder(at)hipaajournal.com

Verity Health System Suffers Third Phishing Breach in 3 Months
Mar21

Verity Health System Suffers Third Phishing Breach in 3 Months

Verity Health System patients’ PHI was exposed in a phishing attack in 2016, in two further phishing attacks in November 2018, and the 6-hospital health system has now announced yet another attack occurred in January 2019. The latest phishing incident has impacted 14,894 patients. Three employees’ email accounts were compromised in the last three phishing attacks. Verity Health System explained in its breach notification letters that no evidence was uncovered to suggest any patients’ protected health information had been accessed by unauthorized individuals. The attacks are believed to have been conducted for use in further phishing attacks on other individuals in the organization, although PHI access could not be ruled out. The types of information exposed in the latest attack includes names, addresses, contact telephone numbers, dates of birth, diagnoses, treatment information, health insurance policy numbers, subscriber numbers, patient ID numbers, and billing codes. Some of the files attached to emails also included Social Security numbers and driver’s license numbers. Some...

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Medical Device Manufacturer Notifies 277,319 Patients About PHI Exposure
Mar21

Medical Device Manufacturer Notifies 277,319 Patients About PHI Exposure

The Pennsylvania medical device manufacturer and software developer, ZOLL Medical Corporation, has started notifying 277,319 patients about the accidental exposure of some of their personal and medical information. The information was contained in emails that had been archived using a third-party email archiving solution. During a server migration, archived emails were exposed and could potentially have been accessed by unauthorized individuals. Upon discovery of the breach, ZOLL initiated an investigation and hired a third-party computer forensics company to determine whether any unauthorized individuals had accessed emails and viewed or downloaded patient information. The investigation revealed protections had been removed on November 8, 2018 and emails remained accessible until December 28, 2018. No evidence was uncovered to suggest any sensitive information was accessed by unauthorized individuals, but it was not possible to rule out the possibility that personal and medical information had been compromised. An analysis of the archived emails revealed they contained patient...

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Northwestern Medicine Sued Over Medical Information Disclosure on Twitter

Northwestern Medicine Regional Medical Group is being sued by a patient whose sensitive medial information was disclosed on Twitter and Facebook. Gina Graziano discovered some of her sensitive medical information had been disclosed on social media websites and contacted Northwestern Medicine to complain about the privacy investigation. Northwestern Medicine investigated the complaint and determined that Graziano’s medical records had been accessed on two separate occasions by a hospital employee who had no treatment relationship with Graziano. The records were accessed on March 5 and 6, 2019, using an employee’s login credentials. Graziano’s medical file contained a range of sensitive information, including her personal details, the reason for a recent visit to the emergency department, lab test results, medications, medical history, imaging results, and other information. Sensitive information which Graziano did not want to be placed in the public domain was disseminated on social media sites causing her to be publicly humiliated. While Northwestern Medicine did not disclose the...

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Database of New Jersey Healthcare Provider Found to be Leaking Patient Data

Another unsecured healthcare database has been discovered which contains an estimated 37,000 records. The discovery was made on March 1, 2019 by security researcher Jeremiah Fowler. A brief analysis of the database appeared to show the records belonged to the New Jersey healthcare provider, Home Health Radiology Services LLC. The database contained highly sensitive patient information such as names, addresses, phone numbers, and dates of birth along with medical notes, diagnoses, treatment information, insurance information, and in some cases, Social Security numbers. In a recent blog post on securitydiscovery.com, Fowler explained that 37,000 case files were found along with 1,540 doctor’s information records, chat logs, emails, support tickets, and many other sensitive files. The records were mostly contained in an Elastic database which could be accessed over the internet by anyone without the need for any authentication. The unsecured database was reported to Home Health Radiology Services, which promptly secured the database to prevent any further unauthorized access. It is...

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Potentially Massive Breach of Protected Health Information Discovered
Mar19

Potentially Massive Breach of Protected Health Information Discovered

Sacramento, CA-based medical software provider Meditab Software Inc., and it’s San Juan, PR-based affiliate, MedPharm Services have suffered a massive breach of protected health information. Meditab provides electronic medical record (EMR) and practice management software to hospitals, physician’s offices, and pharmacies. According to the company website, its software is used by more than 2,200 healthcare clients. Meditab also provides a fax processing service and one of the servers used for processing faxes has been discovered to be leaking data and could be accessed over the internet without the need for any authentication. The unprotected fax server was discovered by the Dubai-based cybersecurity firm SpiderSilk. The fax server was hosted on a subdomain of MedPharm Services and housed an Elastisearch database containing fax communications. Those faxes could be accessed in real time. The database was created in March 2018 and housed more than 6 million records. It is currently unclear how many of those records contained protected health information. According to a recent report...

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