Complete Medical Homecare didn’t encrypt emails sent to trusted business partners like All American Medical Supplies. That failure to encrypt, combined with human error, resulted in a regrettable privacy breach. On December 27, CMH discovered that materials with patients’ names, addresses, dates of birth, Social Security numbers, and certain medical diagnoses had been transmitted to…
Search Results for: patient
FL: Last of five pleads guilty in medical ID theft tax fraud, but questions about the breach remain
Wayne K. Routon reports: The last of five people accused of tax refund fraud involving identity theft from medical records pleaded guilty Friday for his role in the scheme, U.S. Attorney Wifredo A. Ferrer said. Michael Ali Bryant, Sr., 41, of Lauderdale Lakes, faces up to 12 years in prison at his sentencing scheduled in…
CN: Two hospital staff jailed for data theft
Global Times reports that a pharmacist and a buyer employed by Ruijin Hospital in Huangpu District (Shanghai, China) have both been sentenced to a year in jail for selling medication usage data to pharmaceutical companies. According to their report, which was based on coverage on Shanghai Television Station: Wang and Le had been working together…
Second Sentara Nurses Aide Sentenced For Conspiracy To Defraud The Government
There’s an update to a breach first reported on this blog in August 2013. Festus Ighalo, 37, of Virginia Beach, Virginia, was sentenced yesterday to 57 months in prison for conspiracy to defraud the government. Dana J. Boente, Acting United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia; Thomas J. Kelly, Special Agent in Charge,…
GA: Macon woman sentenced in nursing home identity thefts
Liz Fabian reports: A 32-year-old Macon woman faces 27 years in prison after stealing the identities of nursing home patients and filing a half-million dollars worth of fraudulent tax returns. Yolando Blount, also known as Yolanda King, was sentenced Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Macon after pleading guilty in September to wire fraud, mail…
Dentrix taking steps in the right direction
Dentrix’s newest newsletter contains an article on data security that is significant both for no longer using the term “encryption” to describe their security and for offering customers more resources and help. In light of my previous commentary on Dentrix security and marketing, I would be remiss not to note this progress here. Note that…