In reading a report by Sandra Yi on the U. of Utah breach, it appears that there was another breach last year that had not been reported in the chronologies on this site. Yi reports: The theft could have been intentional, but the sheriff’s office says it also could have been that whoever broke into…
U of U Hospital billing records stolen; data from 2.2m patients at risk (update 1)
Billing records have been stolen from a business that does work for the University of Utah Hospitals and Clinics. The records, reportedly containing data from 2.2 million patients, were stolen from an outside vendor of University of Utah Hospitals and Clinics, according to a news release from the university. Source – Salt Lake Tribune Update…
Perspectives: Interoperability and Privacy: Are They Mutually Exclusive?
Thomas H. Lee M.D. has an opinion piece on iHealthBeat that is worth reading. Here’s part of it: The Dissonance of Functional Interoperability At first glance, functional interoperability appears to be relatively achievable, certainly when compared with the difficult challenges associated with technical interoperability. It’s simply a matter of developing sharing rules, privacy regulations and…
Health IT Group Urges Congress To Pass Legislation Quickly
The Health IT Now Coalition is urging Congress to take action on health IT legislation this year, Modern Healthcare reports. Former Rep. Nancy Johnson (R-Conn.), co-chair of the coalition, warned that a lack of legislative action could stall the health care industry’s progress and shift the benefits of health IT away from the patient. More…
Kaiser Backs Microsoft’s Patient-Data Plan
Steve Lohr reports in the New York Times: Kaiser Permanente, the nation’s largest nonprofit health maintenance organization, is endorsing the drive toward consumer-controlled personal health records in a partnership with Microsoft. The partnership, announced Monday, will begin with a pilot project open to Kaiser’s 156,000 employees, which will run until November. If successful, the product…
NH: Police: Nursing home worker charged purchases on dead patient's credit card
Dale Vincent of the New Hampshire Union Leader reports: A former nursing home employee is accused of charging purchases to a deceased patient’s credit card and taking $1,400 from an elderly patient’s bank account to pay her bills. Nadeige Vilgrain, 22, of 11 Barr St., Apartment 2, a former employee of Mount Carmel Nursing Home,…