Cybersecurity

The digital security of healthcare institutions and data is a growing concern, with an increasing number of cyberattacks each year against healthcare systems, which are seen as easy targets. Cyber attacks often use ransomware to target personal health information, patient data and medical devices to cut off access to the data until a ransom is payed to the hacker. Cybercriminals have become more sophisticated, using malware, ransomware and spyware to attack outdated and vulnerable systems and software. Due to the interconnected nature of hospital IT systems today, the weakest link can be older web-enabled medical devices, including clinical and non-clinical systems. Employees are also a major target of attacks via malicious e-mails that prompt them to open attachments that then download malware onto the hospital's IT system.

Certification for HIT security, interoperability unveiled

A standards partnership offers a new certification program designed to assure the security and interoperability of health IT.

HITRUST: Little improvement in data breach prevention since 2009

The healthcare industry has made little progress in controlling data breaches, according to the Health Information Trust Alliance's (HITRUST) analysis of U.S. healthcare data breaches since 2009.

Lost mobile device impacts 1,800 home infusion patients

The loss of an unencrypted handheld Palm device in the Continuum Home Infusion unit of the University of Virginia Medical Center has resulted in a data breach of protected health information. More than 1,800 patients or potential patients were affected.

HHS updates HIPAA enforcement

The Office for Civil Rights within the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has resolved 68,896 HIPAA complaints out of 75,474 filed, or 91 percent of all complaints, since HIPAA went into effect in April 2003. 

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Weekly roundup: Breaches back in the news

Data breaches are back in the news after a few weeks with no reported incidents. More than 100,000 clients of a home monitoring firm were impacted when a company laptop wasstolen from an employee’s car. In Arkansas, the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences is notifying approximately 1,500 patients of a medical records breach involving a resident physician who was terminated in 2010.

Stolen home monitoring firm laptop impacts 116K

A data breach, resulting from the theft of a laptop from the locked vehicle of a home monitoring company employee, has resulted in the notification of 116,000 potentially impacted individuals.

Arkansas breach due to terminated resident

The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences is notifying approximately 1,500 patients of a medical records breach involving a resident physician who was terminated in 2010.

Patients want to control the privacy of their health info

Patients desire granular privacy control over their electronic health information, according to research published online Nov. 26 by the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association.

Around the web

U.S. health systems are increasingly leveraging digital health to conduct their operations, but how health systems are using digital health in their strategies can vary widely.

When human counselors are unavailable to provide work-based wellness coaching, robots can substitute—as long as the workers are comfortable with emerging technologies and the machines aren’t overly humanlike.

A vendor that supplies EHR software to public health agencies is partnering with a health-tech startup in the cloud-communications space to equip state and local governments for managing their response to the COVID-19 crisis.

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