Catawba Valley Medical Center Phishing Attack Impacts 20,000 Patients
On August 13, 2018, Catawba Valley Medical Center (CVMC) in Hickory, NC discovered an unauthorised individual accessed the email account of a CVMC employee. Upon discovery of the email breach, steps were taken to secure the account and prevent further access and a third-party computer forensics firm was called in to assist with the investigation and determine the extent of the breach. That investigation revealed that between July 4 and August 17, 2018, three employees’ email accounts had been compromised after the employees responded to phishing emails. Some of the emails in those accounts contained patients’ protected health information including names, dates of birth, details of medical services received at CVMC, health insurance details, and for certain patients, Social Security numbers. No evidence was found to suggest that any emails had been accessed or copied and no information has been received to suggest patient health information has been misused in any way. The phishing incidents have prompted CVMC to hire security experts to enhance employee education, more robust email...
Email Error Exposed the PHI of 8,000 Members of FirstCare Health Plans
Texas-based First Care Health Plans is notifying more than 8,000 plan members that some of their personal information may have been impermissibly disclosed as a result of automated reports being accidentally emailed to an incorrect recipient. The daily reports were automatically generated and sent to an email distribution list. The reports contained medical requests which included members’ names, member ID numbers, procedure codes, descriptions of treatments, authorization numbers, and names of treating providers. On August 15, 2018, the FirstCare IT security team became aware that the reports had been sent to an external email address in error and the emails had not been encrypted. An investigation into the incident revealed the reports had been sent over a period of 17 months, starting on March 22, 2017. The reports contained the protected health information of 8,056 plan members. FirstCare explained in its breach notice that various security solutions had been deployed to monitor for unauthorized access, acquisition, and unauthorized use of ePHI, but they had failed to identify...
Phishing Attack on Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia Results in Double Account Breach
Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) has discovered the email accounts of two employees have been compromised following successful phishing attacks on August 23 and August 29, 2018. On August 24, CHOP discovered an unauthorized individual had gained access to the email account of a one of its physicians. The investigation revealed the account was first accessed the previous day. Two weeks later, on September 6, CHOP discovered a second email account had also been compromised. In that case, access to the account was first gained on August 29. In both cases, prompt action was taken to secure the accounts and prevent further access. A leading computer forensics firm was also retained to assist with the investigation and assess the scope of the breach. An analysis of the email accounts revealed the individual(s) behind the phishing attacks may have been able to gain access to the protected health information (PHI) of a limited number of patients of CHOP’s neonatal and fetal programs. The information that was exposed differs from patient to patient and may have included a full...
September 2018 Healthcare Data Breach Report
For the second consecutive month there has been a reduction in both the number of reported healthcare data breaches and the number of exposed healthcare records. In September, there were 25 breaches of 500 or more records reported to the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights – the lowest breach tally since February. There was also a substantial reduction in the number of exposed/stolen healthcare records in September. Only 134,000 healthcare records were exposed/stolen in September – A 78.5% reduction in compared to August. Fewer records were exposed in September than in any other month in 2018. Causes of September 2018 Healthcare Data Breaches In August, hacking/IT incidents dominated the healthcare breach reports, but there was a major increase (55.55%) in unauthorized access/disclosure breaches in September, most of which involved paper records. There were no reported cases of lost paperwork or electronic devices containing ePHI, nor any improper disposal incidents. While there were fewer hacking/IT incidents than unauthorized access/disclosure...
OIG Publishes 2016 Medicaid Data Breach Report
A new report released by the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Inspector General (OIG) has revealed the vast majority of Medicaid data breaches are relatively minor and only affect an extremely limited number of individuals. For the study, OIG assessed all breaches reported by Medicaid agencies and their contractors in 2016. According to the report, the records of 515,000 Medicaid beneficiaries were exposed in 2016, spread across 1,260 data breaches. Almost two thirds of Medicaid data breaches reported in 2016 affected a single person with a further 29% of breaches affecting between 1 and 9 individuals. Large-scale breaches, which resulted in the data of 500 or more beneficiaries being exposed, accounted for 1% of the annual total. While the breach causes were highly varied, the majority of incidents were the result of simple errors such as misaddressing a letter, fax, or email. Those breaches only resulted in a very limited amount of PHI being exposed, such as a beneficiary name and Medicaid or other ID number. Out of the 1,260 breaches only 303 resulted in the...



