New York State Departments Investigate Facebook Over Health Data Sharing Practices
A recent analysis of Facebook’s data collection practices has revealed sensitive health data is obtained by Facebook from third party apps, even if the user has not logged in via Facebook or does not even have a Facebook account. Private information including blood pressure measurements, heart rate data, menstrual cycle data, and other health metrics are provided to Facebook, often without the user’s knowledge or any specific disclosure that data provided by users or collected directly by the apps are shared with the ocial media platform. The investigation was conducted by the Wall Street Journal, which conducted tests on various health-related apps. While it was known that some of those apps send data to Facebook about when they are used, the extent of data sharing was not well understood. The report revealed that 11 popular smartphone apps have been passing sensitive data to Facebook without apparently obtaining consent from users. One app, Flo Period & Ovulation Tracker, shares dates of a user’s last period with Facebook and the predicted date when the user is ovulating. The...
NHS to Phase Out Pagers by End of 2021
The National Health Service (NHS) has commissioned a report on the costs of pagers and the extent of their use in NHS Trusts in the UK. The study revealed around 130,000 pagers are used in NHS Trusts – Approximately 10% of the world’s pagers – and the annual cost is around £6.6 million ($8.73 million). Advantages and Disadvantages of Pagers in Healthcare Pagers have served the healthcare industry well for several decades and they are still useful devices. Pagers are easy to use, they are small, easy to carry, and batteries can last months between charges. The pager system uses its own transmitters and frequencies and the signals can pass through structures. Consequently, coverage is excellent, and communication is fast and reliable. Pagers have one function and they perform that task very well. However, there are many drawbacks to pagers in healthcare. Most of the pagers used by NHS Trusts do not support two-way communication. When a message is received, a doctor must find a phone and call a number to receive the message. When an immediate response is not possible, messages are...
UConn Health Phishing Attack Sees PHI of 326,000 Patients Exposed
UConn Health is notifying approximately 326,000 patients that some of their personal information has been exposed as a result of a phishing attack on some of its employees. UConn Health learned about the phishing attack on December 24, 2018. All email accounts were secured, and an internal investigation was launched. The investigation confirmed that multiple email accounts had been accessed by unauthorized individuals. A third-party computer forensics company was retained to investigate the attack and search for protected health information in emails and email attachments in the compromised accounts. While it was not possible to determine who was responsible for the attack nor whether emails and email attachments in the compromised accounts had been viewed by the attacker(s), PHI access could not be ruled out. UConn Health explained in its substitute breach notice that no reports have been received to indicate any patient information has been misused. The majority of individuals affected by the attack were patients. Some employees have also had personal information exposed....
Multiple Rutland Regional Medical Center Email Accounts Hacked
Rutland Regional Medical Center in Rutland City, the largest community hospital in the state of Vermont, has discovered hackers have gained access to the email accounts of nine employees and potentially viewed/obtained patients’ protected health information. On December 21, 2018, an employee of the medical center noticed that their email account had been used to send large quantities of spam emails and on December 28, 2018, a potential security breach was reported to the medical center’s IT department. The IT department determined, on December 31, that the employee’s email account had been remotely accessed by an unauthorized individual. The account was immediately secured and a third-party forensic expert was called in to conduct an investigation into the breach. While the investigation into the breach is ongoing, the forensics expert concluded on February 6, 2019, that nine email accounts had been compromised between November 2, 2018 and February 6, 2019. The types of sensitive information in the compromised email accounts included patients’ full names, dates of birth, contact...
California Bill Seeks to Expand State Data Breach Notification Law
The data breach notification laws in California are already some of the toughest in the United States, although they could soon become even tougher if a new bill is signed into law. Currently, California law requires data breach notifications to be issued to consumers when there has been a breach of financial/banking information, Social Security numbers, health insurance information, medical information, driver’s license numbers, passwords, and data collected through automated license plate recognition systems. The new bill seeks to expand that list to include passport numbers and biometric data such as fingerprints, iris/retina scans, and facial recognition data. The bill – AB 1130 – was introduced by Assemblymember Marc Levine (D-San Rafael) and seeks to close a loophole in the current data breach notification law which could see breaches of highly sensitive information go unreported. The massive data breach at Marriott in 2018 prompted the bill. A database containing the sensitive information of guests of the Starwood Hotels chain was stolen, resulting in the theft of guests’...



