"Don't worry, your medical data's safe."
Joseph Conn of ModernHealthcare.com apparently disagrees (with my sarcasm, that is) and states the obvious outright. I post his story with few comments and several emphases which are mine:
Year closes on a note of breach shameClass-action lawsuits are needed as much for health IT risk and safety issues causing near-misses, injuries and death as for security breaches, I note.
Modern Healthcare
Dec. 2012
I think five years is highly overoptimistic as well on the breach issue, considering the degree of "institutional learning" that's occurred on how to do health IT "right" over the past ~ three decades, and considering that the breaches that are increasing, not decreasing, in intensity and severity across all industry sectors. That includes industry sectors far better equipped to manage IT security than hospitals.
Right now, though, Kabateck says, "This is not to the level of being an epidemic, but it's close."
I think it is epidemic.
Rather than being a miracle that will revolutionize medicine, health IT is like any other information and communication technology (ICT): it has unintended consequences (UC's) that can dilute or even negate its advantages. The issue of damaged medical record privacy, confidentiality and security is but one UC of health IT.
-- SS
6 comments:
I have always found that when the phrase:
“people that met the specific criteria"
is used this is code that someone is gaming the system.
Here and in the previous post we have a large disparity in the number of people put at risk and the cost factors involved.
Sadly, as long as people are paid we will not see a change in the corporate response to these issues. I have been criticized for being overly harsh in wanting felony convictions for the corporate executives involved in these scams. My reality is the only way to change this behavior is for some executives to loose the ability to hold a high paying position in the future.
Steve Lucas
One at a time on a daily basis, I receive mewdical records that are sent or faxed in error, from labs, medical offices, and hospitals. The errors are all HIT generated though human error will always be blamed. The increased incidence in these violations patients' civil rights is directly proportional to the square of HIT penetrance.
It is also consistent with the confusiopn created in the users by instruments of care that have no surveillance for defects and human factors.
You've missed it entirely Scot, HIPAA is efficiently used to protect the hospital.
Just like every other regulation and law, HIPAA has been twisted. It provides a way to stop true reporting of results if the results contradict the PR positioning.
Protect the patient? They obviously don't care about that.
Privacy concerns will always be an issue and HIPPA is certainly the most preventative method to protect privacy.
Best to spell the acronym right if you place such reliance upon it.
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