Medical data on 365,000 patients stolen.

mzkhadir

Diamond Member
Mar 6, 2003
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http://www.computerworld.com/securityto...y/privacy/story/0,10801,108101,00.html

JANUARY 26, 2006 (COMPUTERWORLD) - About 365,000 hospice and home health care patients in Oregon and Washington are being notified about the theft of computer backup data disks and tapes late last month that included personal information and confidential medical records.
In an announcement yesterday, Providence Home Services, a division of Seattle-based Providence Health Systems, said the records and other data were on several disks and tapes stolen from the car of a Providence employee at his home. The incident was reported by the employee on Dec. 31, according to the health care system.

The tapes and disks were taken home by the employee as part of a backup protocol that sent them off-site to protect them against loss from fires or other disasters. That practice, which was only used by the home health care division of the hospital system, has since been stopped, said health system spokesman Gary Walker.

"This was only done in one area of the company," Walker said. "It did not involve the hospital?s database [of patients]....That one part of the company was sending data home off-site. But we should have reviewed the policy."

The data on the tapes was encrypted, Walker said. The data on the disks was in a proprietary file format that was not encrypted, but "is stored in a way that would make it difficult, if not impossible, for someone to access it, then make any sense out of it," he said.

From now on, all data will be made secure using additional technologies, according to Walker. "We are encrypting all the material we can encrypt now," as the health care system reviews all of its procedures and security, he said. "We are sorry that this happened and we don't want it to happen again."

Providence officials said there have been no reports that any of the stolen information has been used improperly since the incident.

Providence is notifying affected patients by mail about the theft. The information on the disks and tapes included names, addresses, dates of birth, physicians? names, insurance data, diagnoses, prescriptions and some lab results. For approximately 250,000 of the patients, Social Security numbers were on the records, according to the health system. Some of the records also included patient financial information.

Rick Cagen, CEO of Providence's Portland service area, said new backup procedures are being implemented using more traditional IT means, including secure sites in remote locations for safety and redundancy. "We do have alternate practices now," Cagen said.

The four-week delay in publicly announcing the theft was needed so Providence officials could recreate the stolen data and identify the patients who needed to be contacted, he said. The delay was also caused in part by the large number of records that had to be processed, he said.

"We realize this is a major inconvenience and cause for real concern, and we deeply apologize to everyone affected by this incident," Cagen said. "Even though we have no indication that the thief has accessed the data, we are doing all we can to help our patients and employees protect their information."

The incident is the second data theft from a motor vehicle announced this week. Yesterday, Minneapolis-based financial services company Ameriprise Financial Inc. said it is notifying some 158,000 customers and 68,000 financial advisers that a laptop containing personal information about them -- including names, account numbers or Social Security numbers -- was stolen from a parked car late last month (see "Ameriprise notifying 226,000 customers, advisers of data theft").


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Eeezee

Diamond Member
Jul 23, 2005
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Oh noes, the doctor gave me antibiotics last time and now these thieves know about it!

Seriously though, identity theft sucks and I hope not too many of those people get screwed...
 

yhelothar

Lifer
Dec 11, 2002
18,409
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Home health documents should all have been done on paper.
Hospice patients are probably all dead by now so it doesn't matter anyways.
 

Scarpozzi

Lifer
Jun 13, 2000
26,391
1,780
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Hopefully the tapes were encrypted as they were supposed to be.

These companies need to hire off-site specialists. We actaully have an armed guard come pick up our tapes and take them to a vault that's in a earthquake-proof facility 15 miles away.
 

mzkhadir

Diamond Member
Mar 6, 2003
9,509
1
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Originally posted by: Scarpozzi
Hopefully the tapes were encrypted as they were supposed to be.

These companies need to hire off-site specialists. We actaully have an armed guard come pick up our tapes and take them to a vault that's in a earthquake-proof facility 15 miles away.

you mean something like Iron Mountain
 

arcas

Platinum Member
Apr 10, 2001
2,155
2
0
"is stored in a way that would make it difficult, if not impossible, for someone to access it, then make any sense out of it,"

History has shown time and again that security through obscurity is a complete farce. Why do people continue to propogate this myth?

 

ironcrotch

Diamond Member
May 11, 2004
7,749
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yea, it was pretty big news up here. just goes to show how dumb people can be. lets back up all the data onto a laptop for security reasons, and then leave it in my car. brilliant.