When Drexel University College of Medicine experienced a breach due to the theft of a computer, they notified states attorney general as required by various state laws. But because only one resident of Maryland was affected by the breach, Drexel included a copy of the notification letter to the patient when they notified the Maryland…
Search Results for: patient
Audit: NJ lacks computer security for personal Medicaid data
Tom Hester, Jr. reports: New Jersey has not monitored access to key personal information in a computer system that tracks care for the poor, leaving no way to know if Social Security numbers and other information about doctors and patients have been misused, a recent state audit found. The analysis determined that the state Department…
File stolen from Johns Hopkins employee vehicle contained sensitive info
Just to keep our records and chronologies complete, I am posting this breach that occurred in December 2007; notification was made in January 2008, but it just came to our attention: A folder stolen from the vehicle of an employee of Johns Hopkins contained sensitive information on 190 former and current members of an outpatient…
Are Your Medical Records at Risk?
Sarah Rubenstein writes in the Wall Street Journal: When it comes to protecting the privacy of patients’ computerized information, the main threat the health-care industry faces isn’t from hackers, but from itself. Read the full story at WSJ
How Personal Health Records Could Make Care Less Efficient
Jacob Goldstein writes in the Wall Street Journal’s Health Blog: High hopes are afoot for personal health records, online homes where patients can store their medical information to take from doctor to doctor and keep track of things like prescriptions and test results. Microsoft and Google, among others, are jumping in the patient-controlled record pool….
Senate bill won't prevent genetic discrimination, privacy activist says
Diana Manos writes in Healthcare IT News: A genetic nondiscrimination bill approved Thursday by a Senate panel won’t protect people from potentially losing their jobs or health insurance if the information gets out electronically, a privacy activist said. Deborah Peel, MD, founder of Patient Privacy Rights, said the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act (GINA), approved April…