Data Breach, Education, HIPAA / HITECH Enforcement, News Events, OCR HIPAA Audits, Risk Analysis/Risk Management, Tip of the Week, Vulnerability Testing & Management

Data breach results in $4.8 million HIPAA settlements

In the most recent disciplinary action by the Office for Civil Rights regarding a HIPAA Data Breach, the OCR has set a new record for cost per affected individual and total fine amount. A breach affecting 6,800 individuals resulted in $4.8 Million in fines, or almost $706 per affected individual, in addition to the intense, and costly, corrective action plan.

Two health care organizations have agreed to settle charges that they potentially violated the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA) Privacy and Security Rules by failing to secure thousands of patients’ electronic protected health information (ePHI) held on their network.  The monetary payments of $4,800,000 include the largest HIPAA settlement to date.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Office for Civil Rights (OCR) initiated its investigation of New York and Presbyterian Hospital (NYP) and Columbia University (CU) following their submission of a joint breach report, dated September 27, 2010, regarding the disclosure of the ePHI of 6,800 individuals, including patient status, vital signs, medications, and laboratory results.

NYP and CU are separate covered entities that participate in a joint arrangement in which CU faculty members serve as attending physicians at NYP.  The entities generally refer to their affiliation as “New York Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center.”  NYP and CU operate a shared data network and a shared network firewall that is administered by employees of both entities. The shared network links to NYP patient information systems containing ePHI.

The investigation revealed that the breach was caused when a physician employed by CU who developed applications for both NYP and CU attempted to deactivate a personally-owned computer server on the network containing NYP patient ePHI.  Because of a lack of technical safeguards, deactivation of the server resulted in ePHI being accessible on internet search engines.  The entities learned of the breach after receiving a complaint by an individual who found the ePHI of the individual’s deceased partner, a former patient of NYP, on the internet.

In addition to the impermissible disclosure of ePHI on the internet, OCR’s investigation found that neither NYP nor CU made efforts prior to the breach to assure that the server was secure and that it contained appropriate software protections.  Moreover, OCR determined that neither entity had conducted an accurate and thorough risk analysis that identified all systems that access NYP ePHI.  As a result, neither entity had developed an adequate risk management plan that addressed the potential threats and hazards to the security of ePHI.  Lastly, NYP failed to implement appropriate policies and procedures for authorizing access to its databases and failed to comply with its own policies on information access management.

NYP has paid OCR a monetary settlement of $3,300,000 and CU $1,500,000, with both entities agreeing to a substantive corrective action plan, which includes undertaking a risk analysis, developing a risk management plan, revising policies and procedures, training staff, and providing progress reports.

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For information about the basics of HIPAA Security Risk Analysis and Risk Management, as well as other compliance tips, visit: http://www.hhs.gov/ocr/privacy/hipaa/understanding/training

The New York and Presbyterian Hospital Resolution Agreement may be found at: http://www.hhs.gov/ocr/privacy/hipaa/enforcement/examples/ny-and-presbyterian-hospital-settlement-agreement.pdf

The Columbia University Resolution Agreement may be found at: http://www.hhs.gov/ocr/privacy/hipaa/enforcement/examples/columbia-university-resolution-agreement.pdf

Business Continuity, Disaster Recovery, Education, HIPAA / HITECH Enforcement, News Events, Risk Analysis/Risk Management, Tip of the Week, Upcoming Events, Vulnerability Testing & Management

Upcoming Events for RISC

Chris Heuman, the Practice Leader for RISC Management and Consulting will be presenting at the Genesis Health Alliance (GHA) Vendor Fair at Evansville, IN.

When: April 10th, 2014

Chris will join key partners to present to members of GHA on the topic of HIPAA’s Contingency Plan Standard – What’s required, what steps should be completed, how to develop documentation, how and what to test

What to Test

Chris Heuman and RISC Management will cover the HIPAA Contingency Plan areas of:

  1.        Data Backup Plan
  2.        Disaster Recovery Plan
  3.        Testing and Revision Procedures
  4.        Emergency Mode Operation Plan
  5.        Data and Applications Criticality Analysis

Join Chris Heuman and RISC to learn real world scenarios and steps for success in meeting this extremely difficult Standard in the HIPAA Security Rule. RISC will introduce leading edge solutions that facilitate a Covered Entity or Business Associate’s compliance with these difficult-to-manage requirements.

To bring this presentation to your site or via WebEx ,Contact RISC to receive more information in identifying, documenting, addressing, and eliminating risk to all of your sensitive information.

In support of knowing what data and which systems are most critical to an organization, and which systems and applications are in-scope for HIPAA, RISC recommends Data Loss Prevention (DLP) solutions.

RISC DLP Solutions

​The first step in any information security and compliance program is understanding what data your organization has, where it is located, and who is using it; authorized or unauthorized. RISC Management’s DLP solution can assist you in finding the sensitive information that is created, collected, stored, processed, transmitted, disclosed, or archived by your organization. Complete and accurate knowledge is necessary in order to understand what laws or requirements apply to your organization, and which members of your workforce may require training or monitoring.

Data Loss Prevention Solution

RISC Management delivers data loss prevention (DLP) solutions that protect regulated, sensitive, or confidential employee, customer, or company information and safeguard intellectual property across all electronic communications channels.

RISC Management can help you watch the sensitive information flowing into, throughout, and out of your network without impacting performance or requiring infrastructure modifications.

Genesis Health Alliance (GHA) is an organization that brings together 20 hospitals from the Southeast Illinois, Southwest Indiana, and Western Kentucky with the mission of improving the health status of the community they serve.  Their other objective is to provide a group purchasing initiative to assist the hospital members in improving services and reducing operational costs. GHA is governed by a Board of Directors that meets quarterly.

To bring this presentation to your site or via WebEx, Contact RISC to receive more information in identifying, documenting, addressing, and eliminating risk to all of your sensitive information.

Rose Rienton

Rose.Rienton@RISCsecurity.com

www.RISCsecurity.com

2014HIMSS       2014RISC