Do HIPAA Rules Create Barriers That Prevent Information Sharing?
The HHS has drafted a Request for Information (RFI) to discover how HIPAA Rules are hampering patient information sharing and are making it difficult for healthcare providers to coordinate patient care. HHS wants comments from the public and healthcare industry stakeholders on any provisions of HIPAA Rules which are discouraging or limiting coordinated care and case management among hospitals, physicians, patients, and payors. The RFI is part of a new initiative, named Regulatory Sprint to Coordinated Care, the aim of which is to remove barriers that are preventing healthcare organizations from sharing patient information while retaining protections to ensure patient and data privacy are protected. The comments received through the RFI will guide the HHS on how HIPAA can be improved, and which policies should be pursued in rulemaking to help the healthcare industry transition to coordinated, value-based health care. The RFI was passed to the Office of Management and Budget for review on November 13, 2018. It is currently unclear when the RFI will be issued. Certain provisions of...
2,393 Patients of Southwest Washington Regional Surgery Center Impacted by Phishing Attack
Southwest Washington Regional Surgery Center in Vancouver, WA, has suffered a phishing attack that has resulted in the exposure of 2,393 patients’ protected health information. The breach was confined to a single email account and no evidence was uncovered to suggest any emails have been accessed or downloaded by the attacker. An extensive investigation was conducted with assistance provided by a third-party cybersecurity firm. The investigation concluded on September 25. The investigation included a manual review of all emails in the compromised account to identify patients affected and the types of information that may have been compromised. Southwest Washington Regional Surgery Center explained in its breach notice that the beach was limited to the following PHI elements: Names, driver’s license numbers, Social Security numbers, medical information, and for a limited number of patients, credit card numbers. The investigation revealed the email account was compromised on May 27, 2018 and access remained possible until August 13, 2018. Patients impacted by the breach were sent...
Congress Passes CISA Act: New Cybersecurity Agency to be Formed Within DHS
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security will be forming a new agency solely focused on cybersecurity following the passing of new legislation by Congress. The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency Act of 2018 (CISA Act) amends the Homeland Security Act of 2002 can calls for DHS to form a new Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency. The CISA Act was unanimously passed by the House of Representatives and just awaits the president’s signature. The new agency will be formed through the reorganization of the National Protection and Programs Directorate (NPPD) and will have the same status as other DHS agencies such as the U.S. Secret Service. The NPPD is already responsible for reducing and eliminating threats to U.S. critical physical and cyber infrastructure, with cybersecurity elements covered by the Office of Cybersecurity and Communications and the National Risk Management Center. NPPD currently coordinates IT security initiatives with other entities, local, state, tribal and territorial governments and the private sector and oversees cybersecurity at federal...
HealthCare.gov Data Breach Exposed Personal Information of 94,000 Individuals
Last month, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) announced that the HealthCare.gov website had been hacked and the sensitive data of approximately 75,000 individuals had potentially been compromised. This week, the CMS issued an update on the breach confirming more people had been affected than was initially thought. The revised estimate has seen the number of breach victims increased to 93,689. The initial breach announcement was light on details about the exact nature of the breach and the types of information that had potentially been compromised. In the initial announcement the CMS explained that suspicious activity was detected on the site on October 13 and on October 16 a breach was confirmed. Steps were immediately taken to secure the site and prevent any further data access or data theft. The CMS started sending out breach notification letters on November 7 which explain the breach in more detail, including the types of information that were potentially accessed. CMS explained that the ‘suspicious activity’ it detected was certain agent and broker accounts...
30,000 Patients Impacted by May Eye Care Center Ransomware Attack
A July 2018 ransomware attack on May Eye Care Center in Hanover, PA saw a range of sensitive patient information encrypted, including data in its electronic medical record system. The ransomware attack was discovered by May Eye Care on July 29, 2018. The ransomware was downloaded on a server that contained patients’ names, addresses, dates of birth, insurance information, diagnoses, treatment information, clinical information, and a limited number of Social Security numbers. May Eye Care Center called in a leading computer forensics company to investigate the breach and an IT firms that specializes in data security was engaged to conduct a full review of security systems and protocols. Security has now been improved to prevent further attacks. A ransom demand was received, but no payment was made. May Eye Care Center was able to recover all of the files encrypted by the ransomware from backups without any loss of data. Al patients impacted by the incident have been notified and the breach was reported to the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights on...



