| LOST HARD DRIVE
COULD CONTAIN VETERANS' PERSONAL INFORMATION
Healthcare corporation Health Net kept
quiet for six months about a lost disk drive, exposing 1.5 million
of its members to identity theft.
NOTE from
Larry Scott, VA Watchdog dot Org
... Heads up, veterans. Health Net is a TRICARE provider and
has a number of dealings with the VA, including operation of
Community-Based Outpatient Clinics (CBOCs). If you have any
dealings with Health Net, you will want to contact them to see if
your info was on the missing computer drive. Do NOT assume
that they will contact you. The Health Net web site is here
...
https://www.healthnet.com/portal/home.do
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Health Net's missing drive could
cost it millions
Connecticut HIPAA lawsuit over lost records
By Chris Mellor
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2010/01/19/health_net_hipaa/
US healthcare corporation Health
Net kept quiet for 6 months about a lost disk drive, exposing 1.5
million of its members to identity theft. It is now being sued.
The law suit, filed by Connecticut's Attorney General, Richard
Blumenthal, is in regard of 466,000 members in that state and
refers to HIPAA regulations.
Health Net has annual revenues of $15.4bn and its "health plans
and government contracts subsidiaries provide health benefits to
more than 6 million individuals across the [States] through group,
individual, Medicare, Medicaid and TRICARE and Veterans Affairs
programs."
HIPAA is the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act
of 1996.
Part
of it refers to national US standards for electronic health care
transactions and individual's privacy for businesses such as
Health Net. It defines many healthcare-related offences with civil
and criminal penalties.
That's the background. In November 2009 Health Net reported to the
authorities in four states that a portable disk drive had gone
astray from its Shelton, Connecticut, office. It was an identity
theft goldmine, containing fulsome information on 1.5m people.
Unfortunately for the corporation, and in an example of an
awesomely dumb thing to do, it had lost the drive in May - six
months before - but had told no-one.
It gets worse. The data was not encrypted and there was lots of
it. The disk contained 120 or more document types, such as medical
records and claim forms, amounting to 27.7 million scanned pages
in total.
The first thing Health Net did after the loss was to hire Kroll, a
forensic computer firm, to look into it. Kroll subsequently
revealed the lack of encryption. Health Net said the data could
only be viewed with specific software, but unfortunately that
software was commonly available.
After the November revelation, Connecticut authorities digested it
and Blumenthal filed the law suit (pdf) last week. Blumenthal
wants the court to tell Health Net to behave properly, according
to HIPAA rules, encrypt all its health data on portable drives,
pay damages to affected members and a fine to the state.
A released quote of his says: "The staggering scope of the data
loss, and deliberate delay in disclosure, are legally actionable
and ethically unacceptable... Protected private medical records
and financial information on almost a half million Health Net
enrollees in Connecticut were exposed for at least six months -
most likely by thieves - before Health Net notified appropriate
authorities and consumers."
Health Net issued a statement following the law suit's January
13th filing, saying: "Health Net's company policy states that data
must be encrypted and secured."
This implies that an employee broke company rules and is
effectively a guilty plea. There was no evidence that the data has
been misused. Health Net is offering "two years of free credit
monitoring services for all impacted members... This service also
includes $1 million of identity theft insurance coverage and
enrolment in fraud resolution services for two years, if needed.
Additionally, if members experience any identity theft between May
2009 and the data of their enrolment, Health Net will provide
services to restore the member's identity at no cost to the
member."
That seems pretty good, albeit belated. Watching supposedly
responsible corporations and government agencies deal with
portable disk drives is like watching unsupervised children with
fireworks and matches. They just go right ahead and blow
themselves up and then try to hide the damage. Health Net 'fessed
up and came up with its damage limitation scheme pretty promptly
after the Connecticut filing, but only after that filing.
The three other affected states could now jump on the lawsuit
bandwagon, and Health Net could still face tens of millions of
dollars in penalties.
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