The Alarming Toll of HIPAA Breaches: Over 41 Million Individuals Affected in 2022
Each year, the Health and Human Services Office for Civil Rights (OCR) composes detailed reports on HIPAA compliance and breaches of unsecured Protected Health Information (PHI) and delivers them to Congress. The latest report is that of events from the 2022 calendar year. These reports can teach us about weaknesses in the HIPAA policies and procedures of other entities, the most common types of threats from malicious actors, and help educate staff on identifying vulnerabilities in the pharmacy’s safeguards during their next Risk Analysis.
Here are a few of the key takeaways from the 2022 Annual Report to Congress on HIPAA Privacy, Security, and Breach Notification Rule Compliance:
- There was a 17% increase in the number of HIPAA complaints received from 2018 to 2022
- There was a 107% increase in the number of large breaches reported from 2018 to 2022
- OCR was able to resolve 87% of the complaints before initiating an investigation; pre-investigation closures could have resulted because:
- The complaint was against an entity not covered by the HIPAA Rules
- Allegations were about conduct that did not violate the HIPAA Rules
- Complaints were untimely because they were not filed within 180 days of when the individual submitting the complaint knew or should have known about the act or omission that was the subject of their complaint
- OCR completed 846 compliance reviews, of which 80% of the entities had to take corrective action or pay a civil money penalty
- OCR may open a compliance review investigation “based on an event or incident brought to OCR’s attention, such as through the media, referrals from other agencies, or based upon patterns identified through multiple complaints alleging the same or similar violations against the same entity”
- OCR initiated 676 compliance reviews that did not arise from complaints but were instead initiated by OCR after a breach report was filed. Of that 626 of these stemmed from breach reports affecting 500 or more individuals, 2 were from breach reports affecting less than 500 individuals, and 48 were brought to OCR’s attention by other means
The 2022 Annual Report to Congress on Breaches of Unsecured Protected Health Information had several key takeaways as well:
- OCR received 626 notifications of breaches affecting 500 or more individuals
- The total number of individuals affected by those breaches was approximately 41.7 million
- 68% of these breaches were from health care providers, 19% from business associates, 13% from health plans, and <1% from health care clearinghouses
- 74% of these breaches were reportedly due to hacking/IT incident of electronic equipment or a network service, 19% from unauthorized access or disclosure of records, 4% theft, <1% from a loss of electronic media or paper records containing PHI, and <1% was from improper disposal
- The PHI was most commonly from network servers (58%), but also from email (22%), paper records (6%), electronic medical records (6%), desktop computer (4%), other portable electronic devices (3%), laptop computer (2%), and other (<1%)
- The largest breach in 2022 was an incident where hackers utilized ransomware to compromise the servers of a healthcare provider with PHI on them, which affected over 3.3 million individuals
- Other hacking/IT incidents included the use of malware, phishing, and the posting of PHI to public websites
- Remedial actions often included:
- Implementing multi-factor authentication for remote access
- Revising policies and procedures
- Training/retraining staff that handle PHI
- Adopting encryption technologies
- Imposing sanctions on workforce members who violated policies and procedures regarding the proper handling of PHI
- Performing a new risk analysis
According to OCR, “There is a continued need for regulated entities to improve compliance with HIPAA Rules. In particular, the Security Rule standards and implementation of specifications of risk analysis, risk management, information system activity review, audit controls, response and reporting, and person or entity authentication were areas identified as needing improvement in 2022 OCR breach investigations.”
If you are not sure where to start, contact PAAS National® (608) 873-1342 for more information on PAAS’ FWA/HIPAA Compliance Program that is easy to set-up, web-based and customized for your pharmacy.
- Hundreds of Patient Information Requests for Medicare: What This Means for Your Pharmacy - November 18, 2024
- Avoid This Billing Pitfall with Your Medicare Part B Nebulizer Solution Claims - November 16, 2024
- OptumRx® Provider Manual Updates May Shift Audits – Especially LTC - October 11, 2024