The loss in 2007 by Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs of 25 million people’s details was a major warning to the public sector. Rob Buckley says that the private sector should also take heed. SC Magazine has a lengthy article reviewing the HMRC breach and its aftermath, with lessons learned and lessons to-be-learned by the private…
Author: Dissent
Transparency is no substitute for informed consent in health records privacy
William Pewen wrote a terrific commentary a few weeks ago. If you didn’t read it, read it now. Here’s a snippet: Unfortunately, the congressional approach to medical records has failed to be a truly patient-centered one. Republicans largely view medical information through a business lens and assert that the marketplace will be self-correcting; many Democrats…
Consent and privacy in HIT, redux
Julie Chang reported on a recent Texas Tribune interview with David Blumenthal, the national coordinator of Health Information Technology. Here’s the section dealing with privacy issues, and it follows on the heels of some great reporting by the Austin Bulldog, covered previously on this blog, that revealed how a lot of patient data is being…
Theft of patients' records nets the max in prison
Jay Weaver follows up on his earlier report: If Ruben E. Rodriguez — sitting in a wheelchair — was looking for sympathy at his sentencing Monday for pilfering more than 3,000 Jackson Memorial Hospital patient records, he came to the wrong place. U.S. District Judge Joan Lenard sentenced Rodriguez to 11 years in prison for…
Florida businessman to be sentenced for stealing patient records from Jackson Memorial
Jay Weaver reports: A Miami-Dade businessman who pleaded guilty to pilfering thousands of patient records to sell to lawyers for injury claims faces up to 12 years in prison at his sentencing in federal court Monday afternoon. Ruben E. Rodriguez, 62, admitted he stole Jackson Memorial Hospital records of patients’ names, addresses, telephone numbers and…
FinCEN report: Identity Theft Trends, Patterns, and Typologies Reported in Suspicious Activity Reports Filed by Depository Institutions January 1, 2003 – December 31, 2009
From the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network report, Identity Theft Trends, Patterns, and Typologies Reported in Suspicious Activity Reports Filed by Depository Institutions January 1, 2003 – December 31, 2009, the Executive Summary: Identity theft was the sixth most frequently reported characterization of suspicious activity within the period of the study, behind structuring/money laundering, check fraud, mortgage loan fraud,…