David Navetta comments on the litigation involving the University of Utah, Perpetual Storage, and Colorado Casualty Insurance Co. You may wish for a scorecard to keep all the players straight: It was recently reported that an insurance carrier (Colorado Casualty Insurance Co.) denied coverage (and filed a lawsuit) for the $3.3 million in costs the…
Search Results for: patient
Hospital fined over privacy breaches in days after deaths of Jackson, Fawcett
Molly Hennessy-Fiske of the L. A. Times provides additional details on one of the fines levied on hospitals in California over breaches: Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center has been fined $95,000 by state officials for failing to prevent unauthorized employees from accessing patient information, the latest in a series of privacy breaches at the prestigious…
Home health aide indicted for ID theft
The Associated Press reports on another instance of home health aides stealing identity information or credit cards from the vulnerable individuals they are supposed to be caring for: Juliet Rose Levesque, a home healthcare provider from Fall River, stole the identity of a Bristol man for whom she was providing in-home nursing services. Levesque is…
(UPDATE) Over 21,000 affected by DentaQuest breach in March still have not been notified
Cross-posted from phiprivacy.net: From the what-took-so-long dept: On May 11, this site reported that the New Mexico Human Services Department had just revealed that a laptop theft that occurred on March 20 affected about 9,600 people. The laptop was stolen from the car of an employee of West Monroe Partners, a subcontractor for DentaQuest, the…
MO: Stacks of medical records found in dumpster outside Florissant doctor’s office
From KMOV: A dumpster outside a St. John’s doctor’s office, listed as Dr. David Brown’s, was wide open and filled with patient folders and other medical records. […] Statement from Dr. David Brown: In an effort to dispose of some files that were many years old, I made a mistake by using improper procedures for…
NY: Revenge of (fired) nerd
Jamie Schram reports on a case where no patient data is reported to have been compromised, but easily could have been because it was accessible: Never sack the tech guy — he knows your IP address. That’s the lesson a Manhattan hospital learned the hard way after a disgruntled computer geek was busted for allegedly…