NJ Dem Really Needs to Shut That Hole in Her Face Regarding This...
Justice Clarence Thomas Had a Killer Line in His Concurring Opinion on Transgender...
The Liberal Media Did Not Handle the Transgender Athlete Ruling Well
Justice Department Investigating Democrat Lawmaker After Spending Campaign Cash on Disney...
This Is How President Trump Could Get What He Wants on Birthright Citizenship
Bernie Moreno Has a Plan to Fix the Birthright Citizenship Problem, and We...
The NRSC Released a Memo Explaining Just How Good Today's Supreme Court Ruling...
The European Climate Cult Demands Human Sacrifice
Rep. Jayapal Insists Socialism Is Popular, Despite Losing Working-Class Voters
Will Justice Samuel Alito Retire This Year?
Spencer Pratt Has Been on a Rampage Against Socialism
Justice Kavanaugh May Have Handed the United States a Roadmap to Fix Birthright...
This Insane Line in Ketanji Brown Jackson's Birthright Opinion Is Making the Court...
House Testimony Gets Heated Over Sanctuary Policies as Angel Mother Testifies
This California Event Could Be the Worst Independence Day Celebration in the Country
Tipsheet

Health Records Hacked

Health Records Hacked

 

In his Address to Joint Session of Congress in February of 2009, President Obama stated that, “our recovery plan will invest in electronic health records and new technology that will reduce errors, bring down costs, ensure privacy, and save lives.”

Advertisement

But Redspin, a leading IT security assessment company, determined quite the opposite.

The [Redspin’s] annual survey, "Breach Report 2011, Protected Health Information,” found breaches in all 50 states, and examined a total of 385 incidents affecting over 19 million individuals since the HITECH Act's breach notification rule went into effect in August 2009.

This translates to a 97 percent increase in health data breaches from 2010 to 2011.

As physicians and hospitals all over the country rush to implement electronic medical records by 2014 or face considerable penalties by 2015, the level of attention given to securing health information ought to become a priority.

According to Healthcare IT News, the Redspin study also found that:

Malicious attacks (theft, hacking, and insider incidents) continue to cause 60 percent of all breaches due to the economic value of a personal health record sold on the black market and for medical ID theft used to commit Medicare fraud, the study found.

Advertisement

Related:

HEALTH CARE

If implementation without more rigorous IT protection continues, the only certainty is that your medical history, often accompanied by date of birth and social security numbers- will be hacked. This is the kind of performance delivered in only one year with government involvement in your healthcare. What’s next? More errors? Increased costs? Or worse, lives lost

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos