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The HIPAA Journal is the leading provider of HIPAA training, news, regulatory updates, and independent compliance advice.

Steve Alder

Steve Alder is the editor-in-chief of The HIPAA Journal. Steve is responsible for editorial policy regarding the topics covered in The HIPAA Journal. He is a specialist on healthcare industry legal and regulatory affairs, and has 10 years of experience writing about HIPAA and other related legal topics. Steve has developed a deep understanding of regulatory issues surrounding the use of information technology in the healthcare industry and has written hundreds of articles on HIPAA-related topics. Steve shapes the editorial policy of The HIPAA Journal, ensuring its comprehensive coverage of critical topics. Steve Alder is considered an authority in the healthcare industry on HIPAA. The HIPAA Journal has evolved into the leading independent authority on HIPAA under Steve’s editorial leadership. Steve manages a team of writers and is responsible for the factual and legal accuracy of all content published on The HIPAA Journal. Steve holds a Bachelor’s of Science degree from the University of Liverpool. You can connect with Steve via LinkedIn or email via stevealder(at)hipaajournal.com

The Cost of SamSam Ransomware Attacks: $17 Million for the City of Atlanta

The SamSam ransomware attack on the City of Atlanta was initially expected to cost around $6 million to resolve: Substantially more than the $51,000 ransom demand that was issued. However, city officials now believe the final cost could be around $11 million higher, according to a “confidential and privileged” document obtained by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. The attack has prompted a complete overhaul of the city’s software and systems, including system upgrades, new software, and the purchasing of new security services, computers, tablets, laptops, and mobile phones. The Colorado Department of Transportation was also attacked with SamSam ransomware this year and was issued with a similar ransom demand. As with the City of Atlanta, the ransom was not paid. In its case, the cleanup is expected to cost around $2 million. When faced with extensive disruption and a massive clean up bill it is no surprise that many victims choose to pay the ransom. Now new figures have been released that confirm just how many victims have paid to recover their files and regain control of their...

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Vulnerabilities Discovered in Medtronic MyCareLink Patient Monitors and MiniMed Insulin Pumps
Aug08

Vulnerabilities Discovered in Medtronic MyCareLink Patient Monitors and MiniMed Insulin Pumps

An advisory has been issued by ICS-CERT about vulnerabilities in MedTronic MyCareLink Patient Monitors and the MiniMed 508 Insulin Pump. This is the second advisory to be issued about MyCareLink Patient Monitors in the past six weeks. In June, ICS-CERT issued a warning about the use of a hard-coded password (CVE-2018-8870) and an exposed dangerous method or function vulnerability (CVE-2018-8868). The latest vulnerabilities to be discovered are an insufficient verification of data authenticity flaw (CVE-2018-10626) and the storage of passwords in a recoverable format (CVE-2018-10622). The vulnerabilities are present in all versions of the Medtronic MyCareLink 24950 and 24952 Patient Monitors. If an attacker were to obtain per-product credentials from the monitor and the paired implanted cardiac device, it would be possible for invalid data to be uploaded to the Medtronic Carelink network due to insufficient verification of the authenticity of uploaded data. The vulnerability has been assigned a CVSS v3 score of 4.4 (medium severity). The way that passwords are stored could allow...

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Protected Health Information of Three Hundred Thousand SSM Health Patients Exposed
Aug08

Protected Health Information of Three Hundred Thousand SSM Health Patients Exposed

SSM Health St. Mary’s Hospital in Jefferson City, Missouri is informing hundreds of thousands of patients that some of their protected health information has been left unprotected and could potentially have been viewed by unauthorized individuals. On November 16, 2014, St. Mary’s Hospital moved to new premises and all patients’ medical records were transferred to the new facility and were secured at all times. However, on June 1, 2018, the hospital discovered many documents containing protected health information had been left behind. The documents were mostly administrative and operational supporting documents and contained only a limited amount of protected health information. For the majority of patients, the only information that was exposed was their name and medical record number. Some patients also had some clinical data, demographic information, and financial information exposed. Due to the number of documents involved, the hospital has retained a document services firm to catalogue all the documents and determine which patients have had some of their PHI exposed. It has...

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Healthcare Organizations Reminded of HIPAA Rules for Disposing of Electronic Devices

In its July Cybersecurity Newsletter, the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights has reminded HIPAA covered entities about HIPAA Rules for disposing of electronic devices and media. Prior to electronic equipment being scrapped, decommissioned, returned to a leasing company or resold, all electronic protected health information (ePHI) on the devices must be disposed of in a secure manner. HIPAA Rules for disposing of electronic devices cover all electronic devices capable of storing PHI, including desktop computers, laptops, servers, tablets, mobile phones, portable hard drives, zip drives, and other electronic storage devices such as CDs, DVDs, and backup tapes. Healthcare organizations also need to be careful when disposing of other electronic equipment such as fax machines, photocopiers, and printers, many of which store data on internal hard drives. These devices in particular carry a high risk of a data breach at the end of life as they are not generally thought of as devices capable of storing ePHI. If electronic devices are not disposed of securely...

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Hacktivist Convicted for DDoS Attack on Children’s Mercy Hospital

A hacktivist who conducted a Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attack on Boston’s Children’s Mercy Hospital in 2014 has been convicted on two counts – conspiracy to intentionally damage protected computers and damaging protected computers – by a jury in the U.S. District Court in Boston. Martin Gottesfeld, 32, of Somerville, MA, conducted the DDoS attacks in March and April of 2014. He first conducted a DDoS attack on Wayside Youth and Family Support Network in Framingham, MA. The attack crippled its systems and took them out of action for more than a week. The attack cost the healthcare facility $18,000 to resolve. Following that attack, Gottesfeld conducted a much larger attack on Boston Children’s Hospital using 40,000 malware-infected network routers that he controlled from his home computer. The attack was planned for a week and occurred on April 19, 2014. Such was the scale of the attack that the hospital and several others in the Longwood medical area were knocked off the internet. 65,000 IP addresses used by the hospital and other healthcare facilities in the area were...

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