Oregon Health Information Property Act Proposes Paying Patients to Share Their Healthcare Data
The Oregon Health Information Property Act proposes patients should be allowed to authorize their healthcare providers to sell their health data and for them to be financially compensated if their health information is sold to a third party. Currently, the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) Privacy Rule limits the allowable uses and disclosures of ‘Protected Health Information.’ HIPAA-covered entities are only permitted to use or disclose PHI for purposes related to the provision of treatment, payment for healthcare, or healthcare operations. While there are some exceptions, other uses and disclosures are prohibited unless consent is first obtained from patients. The HIPAA Privacy Rule covers PHI, which is identifiable patient information. If PHI is stripped of information that allow an individual to be identified, it is no longer considered PHI and is no longer subject to Privacy Rule controls. That means that if a HIPAA-covered entity de-identifies PHI, they can then sell that information on for profit. That information can be valuable to research...
FABEN Obstetrics and Gynecology Informs 6,092 Patients of Ransomware-Related Data Loss
Jacksonville, FL-based FABEN Obstetrics and Gynecology has experienced a ransomware attack on a server that housed patients’ protected health information (PHI). The ransomware was detected on November 21, 2018 and resulted in widespread file encryption. An investigation was launched to determine the extent of the attack and whether any patients’ PHI was accessed or stolen by the attackers. An analysis of the files on the server confirmed that files containing patients’ PHI had been encrypted. FABEN determined that the attackers had not accessed the files and that no data had been exfiltrated from the server. The ransomware variant used in the attack was GandCrab. While free decryptors have been made available for some GandCrab ransomware variants, they do not work on the latest versions of the ransomware. A ransom demand was received by FABEN although the decision was taken not to pay the attackers for the key to decrypt the files. The files that had been encrypted were created between January 2007 and April 10, 2017, and included clinical electronic medical records containing...
New Cybersecurity Framework for Medical Devices Issued by HSCC
The Healthcare and Public Health Sector Coordinating Council (HSCC) has issued a new cybersecurity framework for medical devices. Medical device vendors, healthcare providers, and other healthcare industry stakeholders that adopt the voluntary framework will be able to improve the security of medical devices throughout their lifecycle. The HSCC is a coalition of private sector critical healthcare infrastructure entities that have partnered with the government to identify and mitigate threats and vulnerabilities facing the healthcare sector. The group comprises more than 200 healthcare industry and government organizations. Together they work on developing strategies to address current and emerging cybersecurity challenges faced by the healthcare sector. More than 80 organizations contributed to the development of the Medical Device and Health IT Joint Security Plan (JSP), which builds on recommendations made by the Healthcare Industry Cybersecurity Task Force established by the Department of Health and Human Services following the passing of the Cybersecurity Information Sharing...
Patches Released to Mitigate KRACK Vulnerabilities Affecting Stryker Medical Beds
Stryker has identified nine vulnerabilities that affect some of its Medical Beds. The vulnerabilities could potentially be exploited in a man-in-the-middle attack by an attacker within radio range of vulnerable product to replay, decrypt, or spoof frames. The vulnerabilities are present in the four-way handshake used by WPA and WPA2 wireless security protocols which allow nonce reuse in Key Reinstallation (KRACK) attacks. Similar vulnerabilities have been identified in a wide range of wireless devices. The nine vulnerabilities are summarized below: CVE-2017-13077: Reinstallation of pairwise key in the four-way handshake. CVE-2017-13078: Reinstallation of group key in the four-way handshake. CVE-2017-13079: Reinstallation of Integrity Group Temporal Key in the four-way handshake. CVE-2017-13080: Reinstallation of group key in the group key handshake. CVE-2017-13081: Reinstallation of Integrity Group Temporal Key in the group key handshake. CVE-2017-13082: Reinstallation of Pairwise Transient Key Temporal Key in the fast BSS transmission handshake. CVE-2017-13086: Reinstallation of...
Vulnerability Identified in BD FACSLyric Flow Cytometry Solution
Becton, Dickinson and Company (BD) has identified an improper access control vulnerability in its BD FACSLyric flow cytometry solution. If the flaw is exploited, an attacker could gain access to administrative level privileges on a vulnerable workstation and execute commands. The vulnerability requires a low level of skill to exploit. BD extensively tests its software for potential vulnerabilities and promptly corrects flaws. BD is currently taking steps to mitigate the vulnerability for all users of vulnerable FACSLyric flow cytometry solutions. The flaw (CVE-2019-6517) is due to improper enforcement of user access control for privileged accounts. It has been given a CVSS v3 base score of 6.8 – Medium severity. BD self-reported the vulnerability to the National Cybersecurity & Communications Integration Center (NCCIC). The vulnerability is present in the following cytometry solutions: BD FACSLyric Research Use Only, Windows 10 Professional Operating System, U.S. and Malaysian Releases (Nov 2017 and Nov 2018) The U.S. release of BD FACSLyric IVD Windows 10 Professional...



