Hospital Associations Call for Industry-Wide Effort to Accelerate Interoperability
Seven leading hospital associations, including the American Hospital Association (AHA), are calling for an industry-wide effort to improve data sharing. The new report seeks to enlist and expand public and private stakeholder support to accelerate interoperability and help remove the barriers to data sharing. In order to achieve the full potential of the nation’s healthcare system, health data must flow freely. Only then will it be possible to provide the best possible care to patients, properly engage people in their health, improve public health, and ensure new models of healthcare succeed. Effective sharing of patient data strengthens care coordination, improves safety and quality, empowers patients and their families, increases efficiency, reduces healthcare costs, and supports the accurate tracking of diseases and the creation of robust public health registries. The report explains that great progress is being made to improve interoperability of health IT systems and ensure that patients data can be accessed regardless of location or system. 93% of hospitals now allow patients...
Vulnerabilities Identified in Dräger Infinity Delta Patient Monitors
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security Industrial Control Systems Cyber Emergency Team (US-CERT) has issued an advisory about three vulnerabilities affecting Dräger Infinity Delta patient monitoring devices. The flaws affect all versions of Infinity Delta, Delta XL, Kappa, and infinity Explorer C700 patient monitoring devices. The flaws could lead to the disclosure of sensitive information stored in device logs, be leveraged to conduct Denial of Service (DoS) attacks, or could potentially allow an attacker to gain full control of the operating system of a vulnerable device. The flaws were discovered by Marc Ruef and Rocco Gagliardi of scip AG. The vulnerabilities are detailed below, in order of severity: CVE-2018-19014 (CWE-532) – Exposure of Information in Log Files Log files are not appropriately secured and are accessible over an unauthenticated network. An attacker could gain access to device log files and view sensitive information relating to the internals of the monitor, location of the device, and its wired network configuration. The flaw has been assigned a CVSS v3 base...
Valley Hope Association Notifies Patients of Email Account Breach
Valley Hope Association has announced that an unauthorized individual has gained access to the email account of an employee. Valley Hope Association became aware of a potential account breach on October 10, 2018, when unusual account activity was detected. Prompt action was taken to prevent further account access and a third-party computer forensics firm was hired to determine the nature and scope of the breach. The investigation confirmed on November 23, 2018, that an unauthorized individual had accessed a single email account between October 9-10, 2018, and potentially viewed emails and attachments containing patients’ protected health information. After a thorough review of all emails and email attachments, the forensics firm confirmed that certain patients’ PHI may have been accessed. The types of information contained in the emails varied from patient to patient and may have included one or more of the following data elements: Name, address, date of birth, Social Security number, medication and prescription information, claims and billing information, medical record number,...
December 2018 Healthcare Data Breach Report
November was a particularly bad month for healthcare data breaches, so it is no surprise that there was an improvement in December. November was the worst month of the year in terms of the number of healthcare records exposed (3,230,063) and the second worst for breaches (34). December was the second-best month for healthcare data breaches with 23 incidents reported, only one more than January. In total, 516,370 records were exposed, impermissibly disclosed, or stolen in breaches reported in December: A considerable improvement on November. Were it not for the late reporting of the Adams County breach, December would have been the best month of the year to date in terms of the records exposed. The Adams County breach was experienced in March 2018, confirmed on June 29, yet reporting to OCR was delayed until December 11. Largest Healthcare Data Breaches in December 2018 Rank Name of Covered Entity Covered Entity Type Individuals Affected Type of Breach 1 Adams County Healthcare Provider 258,120 Unauthorized Access/Disclosure 2 JAND Inc. d/b/a Warby Parker Healthcare Provider 177,890...
Revised Common Rule Now Effective
The updated Federal Policy for the Protection of Human Subjects (45 CFR part 46), otherwise known as the Common Rule, is now in effect. The compliance date of the revised Common Rule was January 21, 2019. The Common Rule governs federally funded research on human subjects and was introduced in 1991. The Common Rule was amended in 2015 and underwent a major revision in 2017 to improve protections for research subjects while easing the administrative burden on researchers, especially for low-risk research. The compliance date of the revised Common Rule was initially January 19, 2018; however, two days before the compliance date, an interim final rule was published which delayed the compliance date initially for six months, and subsequently for another six months. Regulated entities were required to comply with the pre-2018 version of the Common Rule until January 20, 2019, with the exception of three provisions of the revised Common Rule which aimed to reduce the administrative burden on researchers. Those three provisions, which could be adopted between July 2019 and January 20,...



